Cute article, but the real reason ports were shit was because of a lack of proper investment in QA. No new and shiny tech will solve that problem unless we can replace board members with AI that focus on quality instead of making money.
It’s almost never QA’s fault. They find the bugs. Someone then has to fix them and resubmit the build for more testing. This is a repetitive, expensive process that nobody in charge wants to pay for.
Cute article, but the real reason ports were shit was because of a lack of proper investment in QA. No new and shiny tech will solve that problem unless we can replace board members with AI that focus on quality instead of making money.
How would more QA help?
It’s in the name - Quality Assurance.
It’s almost never QA’s fault. They find the bugs. Someone then has to fix them and resubmit the build for more testing. This is a repetitive, expensive process that nobody in charge wants to pay for.