MS Office v.X Gets Service Release
techwolf writes "Microsoft put out a patch to Office v.X that touts more than 1000 performance improvements. In other words, 1000 ways they could have written the code better the first time."
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In other words, 1000 ways they could have written the code better the first time.
Come on, this is totally unfair. Office v.X is widely considered to be a better office suite than its Windows counterpart (it really is excellent work), there's no forced registration with Microsoft, and without an office suite, OS X would have had very, very little going for it for a long time. It was rushed out the door so Microsoft could showcase the new Office X for OS X, show that it wasn't a monopoly by providing products and compatibility across platforms, and to help launch OS X.
That being said, who gets everything right on the first try? The Linux kernel? Slashcode? Apache? XFree?
Yes, it could have been written better the first time, but no one gets it right the first time. They had the benefit of real-world profiling, of testing on OS X, X.1, and probably X.2 at this point, they can see where things can be improved, they can see real-world issues with OS X, or new features/code/libraries that can be used and abused, and they released a patch. This sounds exactly like what any other software company would do, except other software companies don't have this much code behind them.
I'm all about bashing MS, but come on people, don't be unfair about it.
--Dan
Who write perfect code the first time around please raise your hands?
(counts hands)
Ok, will all those whose perfect code consists of a 'Hello World' application please put their hands down?
Why, look. No more hands up.
In other words, 1000 ways they could have written the code better the first time.
Damn straight.
In my day, we wrote programs to include everything we would ever need. Before we needed it.
Why, I even finished a program before I started it and it wasn't buggy.
And the code conformed to standards, before the standards were written. And I say programmers are sissies these days. I don't care what "Intel" or "IBM" says, I'm using the instruction set I had 25 years ago, nothing more, nothing less. Vector processing, I spit in your face. ptoo!
*everything* is Orwellian to cats.