• chrisn-585491 (9/26/2013)


    A good developer would not release software with known defects, but in practice, "good enough" is the enemy of "perfect" and the developer doesn't always get to decide priorities.

    Chris - as we said in the 60's "Right On Brother!"

    We do not get to make the call on scope, correctness, or completeness. And often production developers in the commercial environment are embarrassed when management starts trying to find who is at fault for the failures of the product, and marketing says "We can only sell what they give us. Don't look at us, it was them!"

    Not all gray hairs are Dinosaurs!