Just in case this disappears:<p><a href="https://i.imgur.com/KuYKeXY.jpg" rel="nofollow">https://i.imgur.com/KuYKeXY.jpg</a>
Now someone should open a Jira ticket, refine the task, estimate it, define its priority, push it to the backlog and maybe the next sprint (if it is important enough), someone will be assigned, checking all the DoD and DoR boxes, submit a PR, getting it approved and then it will be fixed.
It looks like Jira is testing paying user acquisition. They currently pay $765 million for each new Standard user and $1,506M in the Premium Plan :-D<p><a href="https://ibb.co/BP04ZNg" rel="nofollow">https://ibb.co/BP04ZNg</a><p>Really, I wonder where these numbers come from...
I wonder if any legal minds here could comment on whether they owe me $1.5billion if I sign up for this. Technically it's an offer with consideration that I'm accepting, and happy to pay $-1.5billion for this service, even though I know that trying to get this to stand up in court would be a fools errand.
OK, so this is hilarious, buy I'd be really interested to know where that figure comes from? (obviously an error since its not pulling in the normal cost, but what's it pulling in instead?)
Imagine if this was an intentional publicity stunt.<p>Atlassian would have thought they'd get a free press but instead they're rightly getting ripped apart with sarcastic references to their own product.
Yeah. This price change also is applied to Confluence :D<p><a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33245254" rel="nofollow">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33245254</a>
The premium tier is even worse:<p>Standard
-$765,432,091.03
per user (average)
-$7,654,320,910.25 a month<p>Premium
-$1,506,172,824.28
per user (average)
-$15,061,728,242.75 a month