Comment by Barrin92
1 day ago
>Quality has a meaning and a definition and a field of study attached to it
Yes and I gave you that definition in the first part of my response. That someone in the semiconductor industry made a poor and colloquial choice of words when he confused qualitative and quantitative processes, (the hardware industry deals with the latter), is not evidence to the contrary.
When people talk about software, they're using the terms appropriately. We can objectively talk about the quantities attached to a software. Number of dependencies, size, startup time, what have you, but two people will never necessarily agree on the quality of software, your high quality software might be junk to me, because that is at its root a subjective judgement. There is not a lot of qualitative or subjective judgement in the world of elementary hardware (it either works or doesn't), there is a lot of it in end user software.
It is very difficult to make a bad piece of hardware that does very well on a number of metrics, it's very easy to make a shoddy piece of software that performs well on an infinite number of metrics, because nobody has a subjective experience with a transistor but they do with a piece of software. That is why you should use the terms correctly and not apply processes from one domain to the other.
Yeah, I think we’re just gonna have to agree to disagree here.