Funnily enough, my day job involves battling people desperately trying to roll out the latest version of some sort of software because "it solves all the problems of what we're currently using". I've been though many iterations of this. It hasn't yet.
Funnily enough, my day job involves battling people desperately trying to roll out the latest version of some sort of software because "it solves all the problems of what we're currently using". I've been though many iterations of this. It hasn't yet.
It reminds me of the days, which many of those here will not have experienced, before word processors. If one was writing a report, paper, manual, thesis, book or whatever, it would be typed (from scribbles or dictation) by a typist. One would then go through it all, marking all the typos and other required corrections, and if the changes were more than minimal, a 'complete re-type' was then required. The re-typed document would then eventually appear, with all the previous typos corrected, but a whole new set of typos introduced ... clearly an 'infinite loop'. One simply had to 'give up' at some point, and accept the current version, errors and all!
Few 'improvements' to anything fail to introduce new problems to be addressed in the future When 'the problem' of the status quo is as small as is probably the case with traditional JBs, one can't help but wonder what is the probability of the 'solution' introducing more problems than it solves!
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