Well, as someone working as a web developer, I dislike how clueless management tend to be about organising the work and planning out projects. I rarely if ever see a company where things are planned out properly and people actually know what they need, so we end up seeing a ton of projects eithe run over time/budget or fall apart as the core idea changes completely, or because the design was seemingly created in a silo somewhere with no idea whether the setup considered was actually plausible with the current system architecture and tech stack.
If there's an organisation where the designers and developers work side by side with the customers to figure out what they actually need and get to build a well structured system that solves everyone's problems in the way it's intended to... well it's clearly rarer than hen's teeth.
For a bonus, as a semi freelance journalist/writer, I'd say the aspect I dislike most with that field is how bad most people in the industry are at actually researching the stories they're writing about. You could tell some of the tech press that the next Apple device is powered by a legion of hamsters running on tiny treadmills, and I'd wager you'd somehow see a few of them take it as gospel.
If there's an organisation where the designers and developers work side by side with the customers to figure out what they actually need and get to build a well structured system that solves everyone's problems in the way it's intended to... well it's clearly rarer than hen's teeth.
For a bonus, as a semi freelance journalist/writer, I'd say the aspect I dislike most with that field is how bad most people in the industry are at actually researching the stories they're writing about. You could tell some of the tech press that the next Apple device is powered by a legion of hamsters running on tiny treadmills, and I'd wager you'd somehow see a few of them take it as gospel.