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ChipTuner1d ago
I don't disagree. I think that's more of the software continuous delivery model as a leaky abstraction. Devs want continuous incremental updates, but that often pushes the bugs to prod to be caught later down the line by a user. Complete refactors are replacing traditional hot-fixes and the amount of code that can be written is increasing exponentially. Now the bug will appear and disappear as its found but already been fixed (faulted code completely rewritten) in a nightly build working it's way down the dev pipeline which you'll get a week later.
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Bill Cypher1d ago
The bugs for sure. The number of bugs in allegedly enterprise production ready software these days is insane. "I know we told you upgrading to 26.03.1a will fix it but now that you did all that work it turns out that wasn't true and also has this additional showstopper bug so you need to immediately upgrade to 26.03.58.xyz" Dude, you were up to 26.03.327.jkl before we started. Why didn't we just go directly to the real fix? "Oh yeah you can't upgrade from what you had to that directly. Any other version you could but there was a bug in the upgrade process that affected those 2 specific versions"
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