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This is a tough discussion for me because in my heart I believe your position is correct, however Microsoft seems to be the empirical evidence that I am right. --------------------------------- Booth Martin http://www.martinvt.com --------------------------------- -------Original Message------- From: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Date: 10/09/05 12:57:08 To: 'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion' Subject: RE: Trend towards platform specific languages You confuse quality with perfection, Booth. Quality is a combination of good programming techniques (none of this Extreme Programming crap) and proper testing. On the other hand, the analog of what you said was taught to me by Roger Covey: release version 1 of your product with enough features to call it by the name. Let the market then decide what other features are needed. This way, you won't get lost in analysis paralysis trying to create the perfect program. But the selection/omission of features is a far cry from releasing code that doesn't work. Only a lazy, incompetent and/or unethical programmer writes code with so many bugs that he can't remove them before release time. If you can't write good code, get another job. Apply your world view to the restaurant industry. You would be sending food out undercooked and improperly prepared, and only fixing that food which was sent back. Yeah, that's the spirit. Joe > From: Booth Martin > > An important point Microsoft has taught the software industry is to get > the > software out there, bugs and all. If people like it, fix it. If they > don;t > like it, forget it, and save the dollars and time it would have taken to > get rid of the bugs. The idea of not releasing sofdtware until it is > perfect is just plain silly and wasteful, and in fact probably not > possible given the capacities of normal users. -- This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l. .
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