Comment by mrheosuper
3 days ago
>someone had a case that burned them in some previous project and now his life mission is to prevent that from happening ever again
Isn't that what makes them senior ? If you dont want that behaviour, just hire a bunch of fresh grad.
No, extrapolating from one bad experience to universal approach does not make anyone senior.
There are situations where it applies and situation where it doesn't. Having the experience to see what applies in this new context is what senior (usually) means.
The people I admire most talk a lot more about "risk" than about "right vs. wrong". You can do that thing that caused that all-nighter 5 years ago, it isn't "wrong", but it is risky, and the person who pulled that all-nighter has useful information about that risk. It often makes sense to accept risks, but it's always good to be aware that you're doing so.
It's also important to consider the developers risk tolerance as well. It's all fine and dandy that the project manager is okay with the risk but what if none of the developers are? Or one senior dev is okay with it but the 3 who actually work the on-call queue are not?
I don't get paid extra for after hours incidents (usually we just trade time), so it's well within my purview on when to take on extra risk. Obviously, this is not ideal, but I don't make the on-call rules and my ability to change them is not a factor.
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Nope, not realizing something doesn't apply and not being able to take in arguments is cargo culting not being a senior.