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Subject:Re: Front Page Fussy From:AlQuin <cbon -at- WXS -dot- NL> Date:Fri, 15 Jan 1999 23:07:04 +0100
On 12-01-1999 23:41 Tracy Boyington answered Peter Taylor:
>> Look at it this way: You paid around $75-$100 dollars to purchase a tool
>> that does approximately 75% of what you want it to.
>
>The problem is not that FrontPage only does 75% of the job. The problem
>is that FrontPage does 100% of the job, does about 25% of it wrong (more
>or less, depending on how picky you are) and *doesn't let you know it's
>been done wrong.* I consider that a failure for any product.
Why do we maintain a double standard for quality here, Peter, one for our
work and one for our tools: You would not accept a manual holding 25% of
inaccurate information (I presume...). But for a piece of software by
Microsoft you have a 'build-in' error factor.
What makes this name so particular to reserve a softer quality to it?
Any suggestions?
My two cents,
AlQuin Total Quality
* Technical communication is
writing in the customer's interest.