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Comment by MiguelHudnandez

20 hours ago

I feel that not only should QA staff outnumber developers, but QA staff should have access to development time to design and improve QA tooling.

If you're doing an OS right, the quality is the product. I think MacOS prior to the launch of the iPhone would be the gold standard the kind of product design I'm talking about. At that time they were running circles around Windows XP/7 in terms of new features. They were actually selling the new OSes and folks were happy to pay for each roughly annual upgrade. Often the same hardware got faster with the newer OS.

Lately Microsoft and Apple are racing to the bottom, it seems.

The irony here is that the market is willing to pay for quality.

I don't have time to deal with phone issues-it should just work so I can get on with my day.

Hearing that Apple were dedicating time to stop features and go after stability is exactly what I want to hear.

  • The saddest here is "were". iOS 26 is every day showing us that quality left Apple few years ago.

    • I'm pretty sure that the recent shitshow (at least in iOS land) is the failure to have tentpole Apple Intelligence features, so scraping the bottom of the barrel and shipping things that were in no way finished (e.g. Liquid Glass UI/X).