A big hole in the ground: This is where most of the raw materials of an industrial society come from. To appreciate the scale of this excavation, note that the bright blue object on a shelf near the center of the image is a Porta Potti.
A dragline is the largest of the machines used to strip away the overburden and mine the ore layer at an open-cast mine. A bucketload for this particular dragline, one of the world's largest, is 220 cubic yards. Note the school bus, which would easily fit in the bucket.
In software development deadlines are a necessary evil. It is important to understand when they are necessary, and it is important to understand why they are evil.
Estimation: When estimating engineering work a substantial time investment is required by an engineer in order to get an accurate estimate.
Misaligned Incentives: There is an incentive to lie and give estimates much longer than the feature is truly expected to take.
Low Morale: Deadlines are likely to be missed often. Repeated failure has a cost to the morale of the team.
Micromanagement: Deadlines are wielded by middle managers as a whip to harass and annoy engineers working on features.
High Stress: When engineers feel the pressure of other stakeholders holding deadlines over their heads it creates an environment of high stress.
High Turnover: On teams with high turnover rates the best engineers have an easy time finding new work and leave quickly, the worst engineers have a difficult time finding work and remain. This selects for a lower quality team over time.
The resolution is simple. Never have internal deadlines. Operate on a prioritized and ordered list of features. Estimate only when necessary to prioritize and do so in a t-shirt sizing way. Trust your engineers and they will begin to love their work. Engineers who love their work are happy and productive.