23:54
@TylerH lol, so here is a weird story on this topic from my company from few years ago. So, brief backstory - I was hired to be a sole maintainer of a legacy system. It's WhateverProduct version 4. And it's from 2014-ish or so. Obviously, if it's version 4 there were previous versions. Year of Our Lord 2020 rolls around and suddenly I'm told that we should check if version 3 of WhateverProduct is going to be affected by Flash going EOL.
I know v4 has zero Flash in it, I have no clue what v3 even is or that it was still live. Turns out, that when the company decided to make v4 they didn't implement everything. But they cut out the least used features. Which I guess makes sense. But the customers who used those least used features just stayed on v3.
The real kicker is that the "least used feature" the customer stayed for was 1. A tree table. Yes, a table that shows you hierarchical data. 2. There is a single one of those in just one specific screen in the entire product. 3. That table uses Flash. 4. In the entire product, this is the only piece of Flash used. 5. On the development side, in the entire tech stack, only ever the tree tables have any Flash in them. Nothing else in the framework, plugins, components, etc. uses Flash.
So, my company was in panick mode. They hired the ex dev of the system from his new place. As a consultant at exorbitant fee, obv. Both of us together spent a couple of days trying to analyse the entire code of the old system to figure out that Flash situation. Things seem dire, since the company wants us to do something. Not clear what but Stuff. We were prepared to have to re-write parts of the legacy of the legacy system. We didn't, because we have the best customer relations person.
Turns out in all the panick nobody told her. We were in a call and she joins. Apparently with the whole "Flash is EOL and v3 of the product uses it" nobody bothered to loop her into it. So, she joins the call alright, with, like, 5 minute worth of prior warning for the topic. And as we explain what sort of effort we're looking at to replace the functionality, she drops "Wait, the v3 tree table? We have, like, five customers that even use that. Maybe 3-4 times a year each."
She not only knows the v3 product more than literally everybody else in the entire depratment together, she knows which customer uses which system and how. I mean, she's awesome - she probably even sends birthday cards to the kids of the users. At any rate, our customer rep gal just...calls the customers. And in essence tells them "Hey, we're going to move you to the new version of our product. Yeah, and on screen B you won't have multi-level table, just a single level. OK, bye"
The customers apparently replied: "Oh, OK. Thanks" and that was it. /story