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Akos Komuves's avatar

You're a genius Cleananton (I'm sure this will stick 😂).

I'd love to do such an event as soon as I'm more familiar with things in the new company, and it'll be a blast.

One thing wasn't clear: how do you score if someone deletes 100 lines and someone else deletes 300?

How often was the scoring happening – at the end of the Cleanathon or daily/weekly?

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Serhii's avatar

Honestly, I was hooked just by the title: “How we deleted 4,195 code files in 9 hours.” It sounded like an incredible feat, and I was eager to see how they managed it.

But as I read through the article, I couldn’t help but think, “Wait a minute, so before this event, you guys were actually okay with working in an environment where you had:

Thousands of dollars wasted every month on unnecessary resources.

4,195 dead or zombie code files and an additional 4,747 lines of code just lying around, clogging up the system.

120 open, unresolved PRs and 2,851 unused branches just sitting there.

22 unused feature flags and 46 outdated packages in your dependencies.

42 unused Jenkins jobs and 58 kubeflow pipelines that no one was using.

50 dead repositories that were just taking up space.

47,804 unnecessary files in Google Drive that no one needed.

159 old Confluence documents and 200 archived Jira tickets that no one cared about.

WTF? So you’re telling me that there were nine departments, each with 3-4 members, and no one seemed to care about this mess until a competition came along? :sweat_smile:

I mean, who created this mess in the first place? These same teams were costing the company thousands of dollars every month with their neglect. They made it harder to maintain projects and probably made onboarding new people a nightmare. And now, they’re publishing a post about how proud they are of cleaning it up?

Honestly, I was thinking someone should have been fired over this. It’s no wonder companies like Twitter ended up laying off 80% of their staff. If this is what’s considered acceptable until someone dangles a prize in front of them, it’s clear why some companies take drastic measures.

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