https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Not even close. iOS 13 was so bad that the first released version was
13.1
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 12:25:28 AM UTC-4, Bob Campbell wrote:
Not even close. iOS 13 was so bad that the first released version was
13.1
Wrong! That is not at all what I remember. This is: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IOS_13
iOS 13.0, build 17A577 was released on September 19, 2019. The initial release was only on iPhones.
Over the next 6 weeks or so there were 4 bug fix releases issued for 13.0. There were a total of 16 updates issued.
iOS 13.1 build 17A844 was released on September 24, 2019 for iPod Touch and HomePod.
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that
there are issues that require an update within days.
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issues that require an update within days.
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issues that require an update within days.
On 2021-10-14 7:54 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issues that require an update within days.
<https://www.droid-life.com/2020/10/05/android-11s-first-update-fixes-a-bunch-of-pixel-bugs/>
iOS 15 was released on September 20, and you found an update from
October 1. So 11 days later.
Android 11 was released on September 8th and was updated to fix bugs
October 5.
Is that really so different?
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 7:54:32 AM UTC-7, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
Contrary to Theo's claim that he has "no experience in making a flood bot"<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issues that require an update within days.
(a lie as exposed by the fact that he annoyed everyone in COLA) he was
seen asking IT departments how they would trick someone to give up their password. Theo expects people to believe that a poster such as Shadow who
he has repeatedly claimed to be a deceiver is someone to 'respect'? Why
can he assume people are THAT stupid?
No no hell no. He never agreed to stop trolling. He lied about his trolling which surprised nobody.
Now that nobody is speaking to Theo, he's making it sound like he's broken NNTP protocol -- when in fact, people are just sick of his shit. Calls
it "obsessing" over him, even though he continues to provoke that selfsame retort.
Theo lies so frequently that he has a difficult time keeping track of
his misrepresentations. Or his sock puppets and other crap.
--
Live on Kickstarter!! https://www.google.com/search?q=Steve+Petruzzellis%3A+narcissistic+bigot https://swisscows.com/web?query=dustin%20cook%20%22functionally%20illiterate%20fraud%22
https://www.bing.com/search?q=dustin%20cook%20functionally%20illiterate%20fraud
Dustin Cook is a functional illiterate fraud
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing thatBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: what do you suggest as the
there are issues that require an update within days.
alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally involved in Software development or testing.
-hh
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing thatBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: what do you suggest as the
there are issues that require an update within days.
alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have been obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had been trying the OS in their car systems.
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing thatBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: what do you suggest as the
there are issues that require an update within days.
alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.LOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cards too. And then another
on terminals, etc. Things were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have been obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had been trying the OS in their car systems.Try tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something from this century, right?
-hh
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature
came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing thatBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: what do you suggest as the
there are issues that require an update within days.
alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
LOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cards too. And then another
on terminals, etc. Things were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have been obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had been trying the OS in their car systems.
Try tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something from this century, right?
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX) running TOPS-10.
Long before that for my Master's and PhD projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe. That was input on punch cards. Not much experience since then other than dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay issues seen
in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by a widespread group
of beta testers.
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:punch cards. Not much experience since then other than dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:LOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cards too. And then another
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:But put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: what do you suggest as the
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature >>>>>> came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that
there are issues that require an update within days.
alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
on terminals, etc. Things were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have been obvious if aTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something from this century, right?
meaningful number of beta users had been trying the OS in their car systems.
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX) running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's and PhD projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe. That was input on
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by a widespread group of beta testers.
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:on punch cards. Not much experience since then other than dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:LOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cards too. And then another
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote: >>>>> On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
But put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: what do you suggest as theOn 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real RTM version, not another public Beta?
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out what feature >>>>>> came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that
there are issues that require an update within days.
alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
on terminals, etc. Things were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have been obvious if a >>> meaningful number of beta users had been trying the OS in their car systems.Try tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something from this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX) running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's and PhD projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe. That was input
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by a widespread group of beta testers.
So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were a teenager, and you
think you understand software development, do you?
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E.
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas
E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan
wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/
So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were a teenager, andLOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cards too.But put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: whatAndroid 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out
what feature came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google
Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issues that
require an update within days.
do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free
software", that means you'll never ship. It also means that
you've never been professionally involved in Software
development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the
code. That was before the PC revolution.
And then another on terminals, etc. Things were waaaaay
different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have beenTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something from
obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had been trying
the OS in their car systems.
this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using BASIC
code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX) running
TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's and PhD projects I
wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe. That was input
on punch cards. Not much experience since then other than
dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay issues
seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by a
widespread group of beta testers.
you think you understand software development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test software extensively before you release it to a broader user group. I was 36
or 37 when I was programming on that platform in the 1980's. I was a
teenager in the late 50's and early 60's - before you were born I
think.
On 2021-10-28 5:34 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E.
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4, Thomas
E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4, Alan
wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/ >>>>>>>>>
RTM version, not another public Beta?
So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were a teenager, andLOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cards too.But put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom: whatAndroid 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find out
what feature came up missing on Jack Wallen's Google
Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
Apple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issues that
require an update within days.
do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free
software", that means you'll never ship. It also means that
you've never been professionally involved in Software
development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote the
code. That was before the PC revolution.
And then another on terminals, etc. Things were waaaaay
different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should have beenTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something from
obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had been trying
the OS in their car systems.
this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using BASIC
code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX) running
TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's and PhD projects I
wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe. That was input
on punch cards. Not much experience since then other than
dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay issues
seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by a
widespread group of beta testers.
you think you understand software development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test software extensively before you release it to a broader user group. I was 36
or 37 when I was programming on that platform in the 1980's. I was a teenager in the late 50's and early 60's - before you were born I
think.
Really?
You were on a small team, doing what? Not releasing software with
literally millions of lines of code to hundreds of millions of users,
were you?
How many users eventually used the software you "developed", Liarboy?
Were any of them outside of the organization of which you were a part?
On Thursday, October 28, 2021 at 2:57:56 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real
On 2021-10-28 5:34 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E.
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4,
Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4,
Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/ >>>>>>>>>>>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find
out what feature came up missing on Jack Wallen's
Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Really?So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were a teenager,LOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cardsApple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issuesBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom:
that require an update within days.
what do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free
software", that means you'll never ship. It also means
that you've never been professionally involved in
Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote
the code. That was before the PC revolution.
too. And then another on terminals, etc. Things were
waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should haveTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something
been obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had
been trying the OS in their car systems.
from this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using
BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX)
running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's and PhD
projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe.
That was input on punch cards. Not much experience since then
other than dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay
issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by
a widespread group of beta testers.
and you think you understand software development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test
software extensively before you release it to a broader user
group. I was 36 or 37 when I was programming on that platform in
the 1980's. I was a teenager in the late 50's and early 60's -
before you were born I think.
You were on a small team, doing what? Not releasing software with
literally millions of lines of code to hundreds of millions of
users, were you?
How many users eventually used the software you "developed",
Liarboy? Were any of them outside of the organization of which you
were a part?
Scale does not matter. Released software should be vetted with a
large group. CarPlay issues should have been discovered. It’s a key
iOS feature.
On 2021-10-30 3:08 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 28, 2021 at 2:57:56 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real
On 2021-10-28 5:34 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas E.
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM UTC-4,
Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM UTC-4,
Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/ >>>>>>>>>>>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date. Find
out what feature came up missing on Jack Wallen's
Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Really?So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were a teenager,LOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punch cardsApple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there are issuesBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute, Tom:
that require an update within days.
what do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship bug-free
software", that means you'll never ship. It also means
that you've never been professionally involved in
Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even wrote
the code. That was before the PC revolution.
too. And then another on terminals, etc. Things were
waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs should haveTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used something
been obvious if a meaningful number of beta users had
been trying the OS in their car systems.
from this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team using
BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded to VAX)
running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's and PhD
projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM mainframe.
That was input on punch cards. Not much experience since then
other than dabbling a bit with Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the CarPlay
issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been detected by
a widespread group of beta testers.
and you think you understand software development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test
software extensively before you release it to a broader user
group. I was 36 or 37 when I was programming on that platform in
the 1980's. I was a teenager in the late 50's and early 60's -
before you were born I think.
You were on a small team, doing what? Not releasing software with
literally millions of lines of code to hundreds of millions of
users, were you?
How many users eventually used the software you "developed",
Liarboy? Were any of them outside of the organization of which you
were a part?
Scale does not matter. Released software should be vetted with a
large group. CarPlay issues should have been discovered. It’s a key
iOS feature.
Scale matters very much.
On Saturday, October 30, 2021 at 6:14:49 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real
On 2021-10-30 3:08 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 28, 2021 at 2:57:56 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-28 5:34 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan
wrote:
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas
E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4,
-hh wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM
UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM
UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/ >>>>>>>>>>>>>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:RTM version, not another public Beta?
Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date.
Find out what feature came up missing on Jack
Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers>
Scale matters very much.Really?So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were aLOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punchApple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there areBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute,
issues that require an update within days.
Tom: what do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship
bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally
involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even
wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
cards too. And then another on terminals, etc. Things
were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs shouldTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used
have been obvious if a meaningful number of beta
users had been trying the OS in their car systems.
something from this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team
using BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded
to VAX) running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's
and PhD projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM
mainframe. That was input on punch cards. Not much
experience since then other than dabbling a bit with
Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the
CarPlay issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been
detected by a widespread group of beta testers.
teenager, and you think you understand software
development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test
software extensively before you release it to a broader user
group. I was 36 or 37 when I was programming on that platform
in the 1980's. I was a teenager in the late 50's and early
60's - before you were born I think.
You were on a small team, doing what? Not releasing software
with literally millions of lines of code to hundreds of
millions of users, were you?
How many users eventually used the software you "developed",
Liarboy? Were any of them outside of the organization of which
you were a part?
Scale does not matter. Released software should be vetted with a
large group. CarPlay issues should have been discovered. It’s a
key iOS feature.
It does in the sense that the more lines of code and more complexity
the more beta testers you need. HOW could Apple have missed the
iPhone 13/iOS/CarPlay problems. Here is how. Apple is so paranoid
about hardware releases they do not do tens of thousands of beta
tests with an OS revision and a new phone.
On 2021-11-03 7:33 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Saturday, October 30, 2021 at 6:14:49 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real >>>> RTM version, not another public Beta?
On 2021-10-30 3:08 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 28, 2021 at 2:57:56 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-28 5:34 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan
wrote:
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas
E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4,
-hh wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM
UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM
UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/ >>>>>>>>>>>>>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date.
Find out what feature came up missing on Jack
Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers> >>>>>>>>>>>
Scale matters very much.Really?So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were aLOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punchApple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there areBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute,
issues that require an update within days.
Tom: what do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship
bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally
involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even
wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
cards too. And then another on terminals, etc. Things
were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs shouldTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used
have been obvious if a meaningful number of beta
users had been trying the OS in their car systems.
something from this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team
using BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded
to VAX) running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's
and PhD projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM
mainframe. That was input on punch cards. Not much
experience since then other than dabbling a bit with
Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the
CarPlay issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been
detected by a widespread group of beta testers.
teenager, and you think you understand software
development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test
software extensively before you release it to a broader user
group. I was 36 or 37 when I was programming on that platform
in the 1980's. I was a teenager in the late 50's and early
60's - before you were born I think.
You were on a small team, doing what? Not releasing software
with literally millions of lines of code to hundreds of
millions of users, were you?
How many users eventually used the software you "developed",
Liarboy? Were any of them outside of the organization of which
you were a part?
Scale does not matter. Released software should be vetted with a
large group. CarPlay issues should have been discovered. It’s a
key iOS feature.
It does in the sense that the more lines of code and more complexity
the more beta testers you need. HOW could Apple have missed the
iPhone 13/iOS/CarPlay problems. Here is how. Apple is so paranoid
about hardware releases they do not do tens of thousands of beta
tests with an OS revision and a new phone.
So you were completely wrong when you said, "Scale does not matter".
Got it.
On Wednesday, November 3, 2021 at 11:17:30 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:stand-alone IBM PC's. We did our testing with a small group and found a few issues. The system became obsolete when we went to a networked PC/Internet environment and the PDP-10 timeshare system was taken down. IT took over the servers that replaced the
On 2021-11-03 7:33 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Saturday, October 30, 2021 at 6:14:49 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:A few weeks out at 2 bug fixes already. When will Apple release the real >>>>>> RTM version, not another public Beta?
On 2021-10-30 3:08 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 28, 2021 at 2:57:56 PM UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-28 5:34 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Tuesday, October 26, 2021 at 12:09:45 PM UTC-4, Alan
wrote:
On 2021-10-25 5:16 a.m., Thomas E. wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 10:07:02 PM UTC-4, -hh
wrote:
On Sunday, October 24, 2021 at 5:18:10 PM UTC-4, Thomas
E. wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 1:12:56 PM UTC-4,
-hh wrote:
On Thursday, October 14, 2021 at 10:54:32 AM
UTC-4, Thomas E. wrote:
On Wednesday, October 13, 2021 at 4:11:27 PM
UTC-4, Alan wrote:
On 2021-10-11 3:30 p.m., Thomas E. wrote:
https://www.zdnet.com/article/ios-15-0-1-bugfixes-galore/ >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
There have been 48 release versions of Android 11 to date:Android 11 was release on September 8, 2020.
14 days later:
'Android 11 hasn't been the smoothest to date.
Find out what feature came up missing on Jack
Wallen's Google Pixel 4.'
<https://www.techrepublic.com/article/the-android-11-update-is-buggy-and-missing-features/>
Android's issues have nothing to do with the fact that
<https://source.android.com/setup/start/build-numbers> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
So you were completely wrong when you said, "Scale does not matter".Scale matters very much.Really?So you wrote some BASIC on a PDP-10 when you were aLOL, I had a job where I was writing on IBM punchApple releases iOS x.0 knowing that there areBut put your Project Manager hat on for a minute,
issues that require an update within days.
Tom: what do you suggest as the alternative?
Because if you just simplistically say "ship
bug-free software", that means you'll never ship.
It also means that you've never been professionally
involved in Software development or testing.
Actually I was once involved in development, even
wrote the code. That was before the PC revolution.
cards too. And then another on terminals, etc. Things
were waaaaay different back then vs today.
In this case, the widespread CarPlay bugs shouldTry tracking test cases in JIRA. You have used
have been obvious if a meaningful number of beta
users had been trying the OS in their car systems.
something from this century, right?
-hh
It was 1982-84 or thereabouts. I was on a small team
using BASIC code on a DEC PDP-10 system (later upgraded
to VAX) running TOPS-10. Long before that for my Master's
and PhD projects I wrote some JCL and SAS code on an IBM
mainframe. That was input on punch cards. Not much
experience since then other than dabbling a bit with
Excel VB.
My point is simple - anything as widespread as the
CarPlay issues seen in iOS 15 could have/should have been
detected by a widespread group of beta testers.
teenager, and you think you understand software
development, do you?
I do understand quite well that you let a few people test
software extensively before you release it to a broader user
group. I was 36 or 37 when I was programming on that platform
in the 1980's. I was a teenager in the late 50's and early
60's - before you were born I think.
You were on a small team, doing what? Not releasing software
with literally millions of lines of code to hundreds of
millions of users, were you?
How many users eventually used the software you "developed",
Liarboy? Were any of them outside of the organization of which
you were a part?
Scale does not matter. Released software should be vetted with a
large group. CarPlay issues should have been discovered. It’s a
key iOS feature.
It does in the sense that the more lines of code and more complexity
the more beta testers you need. HOW could Apple have missed the
iPhone 13/iOS/CarPlay problems. Here is how. Apple is so paranoid
about hardware releases they do not do tens of thousands of beta
tests with an OS revision and a new phone.
Got it.
No, you are wrong. My point was that as scale increases you need more testing. The systems we developed were pretty simple by today's standards. This was before the PC/Internet/Intranet were even a thing. Staff had dumb terminals for the DEC/PDP-10 and
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