Jason Proctor writes: >>and having been in software development for a similar number of years, my opinion is that commercial "priorities", scheduling "decisions", and cost-cutting on various essential factors (such as QA) have a far greater influence on the quality of software in general than the IQ of the programmers concerned!<< Yes, that stuff enters into it too. But from much of the software I've bought, it seems clear that the programmer didn't even try running the code he wrote just once to see if it worked. When a company has been in business 10 years, and is on revision umpteen of a particular piece of software, and I receive it, and within minutes of first use I've found several major bugs, I'd say there is something wrong with the programmer. I don't know how many decades it should take to get it right. I've been under the same kinds of pressures and yet stuff I've written, and we're talking tons of miserable assembly code in there, has been so bug free, it's gone straight into coin operated archade games. Nobody would tolerate those bombing out in the middle of a level. It's simple. Write a line of code, or a routine, then actually run it to be sure it works. If it doesn't work, either fix it or remove it because it shouldn't be in there when the product ships. The programmer should be his own beta tester, since people hired to be beta testers are idiots just like the know-nothing sales people and poser excutives. Sorry for my attitude against software, but I'm fed up with every single software application I own. NONE of it works correctly. Even Photoshop and CoolEdit, the two I used to hold up as rare examples of things that worked correctly, I've had too many problems with lately because of moronic bugs. And for those software companies to take the attitude that I should continue to pay for upgrades to fix their incompetent programming is unacceptable, and in another industry would be illegal. Cars get recalled at the company's expense when they don't work, I shouldn't have to pay endlessly for bug fixes. Yes, I'm a little bit in a bitchy mood. I think it's that time of the month. Come to think of it, I have been feeling a bit girlish lately. -Elhardt
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Re: [motm] Ken Elhardt's Patchbook Series
2006-07-15 by Kenneth Elhardt
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