7 Quotes About Software Development

Don’t get too hung up on a single tool or technique. While it can be helpful to have a solid foundation in one area, switching to another area every few months is a surefire way to make your brain hurt. If you’re looking for some software development quotes that will help improve your workflow and help you build your skills, this collection is for you. Whether you’re just getting started or looking to add some new tools to your tool belt, these quotes will inspire and motivate you.

1
We see a lot of feature-driven product design in which the cost of features is not properly accounted. Features can have a negative value to customers because they make the products more difficult to understand and use. We are finding that people like products that just work. It turns out that designs that just work are much harder to produce that designs that assemble long lists of features. Douglas Crockford
Software always remain softly for End users! But sometimes hardly...
2
Software always remain softly for End users! But sometimes hardly to developers! Bananeza Pacifique
3
It is best to be the CEO; it is satisfactory to be an early employee, maybe the fifth or sixth or perhaps the tenth. Alternately, one may become an engineer devising precious algorithms in the cloisters of Google and its like. Otherwise, one becomes a mere employee. A coder of websites at Facebook is no one in particular. A manager at Microsoft is no one. A person (think woman) working in customer relations is a particular type of no one, banished to the bottom, as always, for having spoken directly to a non-technical human being. All these and others are ways for strivers to fall by the wayside – as the startup culture sees it – while their betters race ahead of them. Those left behind may see themselves as ordinary, even failures. Ellen Ullman
4
Software testing is a sport like hunting, it's bughunting. Amit Kalantri
5
The quickest methods aren't always the fastest methods Gordon Beeming
6
Programming is a social activity. Robert C. Martin