AdamBaines, on 03 June 2014 - 04:49 PM, said:
It is an interesting issue. Being a software QA analyst, I'm guessing this was out of scope in their regression test bed. Nothing that was changed (on the surface) would have effected this mech, unless show how the two Hero chasis (Treb and BJ) shared some component.
Yep, that`s actually the point people seem to miss, and it`s ironically not even specific to software development or even the IT industry, it`s actually nothing more than basic common sense used to streamline a process. That being that you do not usually recheck things that you know (or at least assume) did not change and have no known reason to do so without outside factors.
Or do you people check your car every day if your winter (or summer, dep. on season) tires are still mounted, even if you put them on yesterday? After all, you could get a ticket if someone swapped them for you overnight as a surprise favor....
Or do you unpack your suitcase again, just to make sure that you packed everything, even though you checked off every item as you packed it? After all, maybe the daughter you don`t have yet just suddenly materialized in ethereal form and deviously took your toothbrush or favorite underwear back out....
Or maybe you walk into the kitchen every 5 minutes to turn the oven off just in case, even though you haven`t used it since January? After all, maybe your cat suddenly developed a penchant for weed brownies and turns out to be a mad baker but forgot to turn it off (possibly because it was baked
)
This is exactly the same thing, you do things step by step, check and verify your work at each step, and when it`s done you continue with the next task or phase of the process and don`t waste thought ot time on work that is already "done". You don`t go off looking for completely random unexpected issues that may or may not pop up just "because you can", becasue that is almost always an absolute waste of resources.
There are just some things that no amount of planning and quality control can avoid. For example I build rollercoasters, and the degree of precision and planning is just staggering (and also a fair portion of the approxmately 12 months it takes to build one). Track parts are fit to tolerances of .05mm in the shop... and every once in a while still end up entire centimeters off when the boys are out in the parks assembling them, which is a huge *********** for them, but in 99.99% of the cases it was not something that anybody could have realistically expected (Nature!!). Still means we have to fix it, though, and damn fast, becasue the ride is opening next week.
However, hat does not in any way change that I spent approx. 8 hours making sure the fit on both ends was absolutely perfect, that all the welds were perfect, that the trusses were in the proper order... And checking it all another 30000000000 times wouldn`t have changed the final outcome, either.
In real life, sometimes **** just happens, and it doesn`t matter who you are, it will eventually happen to you, too. All you can do is deal with it.
Now, PGI admittedly doesn`t have the best track record as far as things like this go, so at least an audit of their QC standards is probably warranted, and maybe somebody even needs to get bitchslapped. But these constant accusations that PGI is completely incompetent and /or making mistakes "on purpose" help nothing and serve only to undermine yourt own credibility, especially when accompanying statements are just dripping with ignorance of the subject at hand.
To which point: those "laughing" at the 7kb /20 minutes statement obviously have a knowledge deficiency with regards to server farm maintenance in general, especially ones that are supposed to be simultaneously readily accessible from the WWW and secure.
Edited by Zerberus, 05 June 2014 - 09:52 AM.