Another good one is someone using your website through chrome translation. Similar to adblock in that it messes with random bits of your HTML. There's a particular problem it can cause with react, where if a text node that's rendered conditionally gets changed then it breaks your site - easy to work around once you know what it is (just wrap it in a span with an id) but took a bit of time to catch.
Many moons ago as a young developer at Microsoft I was asked what I thought of a nice big poster advertising our team's offering, to be displayed around campus. The picture had a large background circle that was made out of various small words and symbols, looking really neat if you were up close to it, very stylish. From the distance and to me with my poor eyesight and my prescription that wasn't up to date, it looked like a gray ring left on the paper with a giant leaking coffee mug. I wasn't as polite as I'd be today and so I pretty much said "hey this looks like a coffee spill". The designer was a bit upset but they did fix it...
Tech has a long history of declaring things useless and then gradually bootstrapping them back up as we learn all the lessons that led to those things existing.
'"Tradition" is a set of solutions for which we have forgotten the problems. Throw away the solution and you get the problem back.'
This is, by far, my most conservative opinion. Credit to Donald Kingsbury for the quote.
Honorable mention re: the same problem, "dogfooding"[0] is gone from the software industry, which is why users often feel like they're getting suckered by the companies they patronize; the decision makers, who don't themselves use the product, absolutely see the users as suckers.
The alternative is what we see in politics and big corps:
1. tragedy happens
2. "leader" adds some checks to avoid the problem
3. the check literally will not stop the problem
4. everything sucks
And it's always a ratchet that goes in the same direction: More rules, more laws, more checks, more crap.
Example: Sweden had it's first mass school shooting and politicians suggest stuff like locking doors for unauthorized (the shooter was a student!).
A few years before that Sweden had a terrorist act where a dude jumped into a truck and drove into a crowd. What did the politicians do? Blame car companies for "not having a way to limit access to who can drive a car". Yes. They reinvented car keys. They also made everyone walk home instead of taking the subway. Did anyone die on the subway? No. Were the roads now CRAMMED with THOUSANDS of people in the middle of the road, making an extremely juicy terrorist target for someone with a truck? Yes, so much so that I was a bit scared walking home in a way I wouldn't have been if I wasn't now a part of a crowd for no damn reason.
This is the weapon of a good programmer. Not as clumsy or random as continuous integration or “move fast and break things”; an elegant weapon for a more civilized age.
I'm a huge Newsroom sucker, but that one just felt weird. The whole "we used [clip] sarin" felt really drawn-out and kind of weird. On the other hand, my partner and I constantly say "we used sarin" to each other so maybe it has a way of sticking in your brain regardless. (And it might mean our relationship is... odd.)
This is, by far, my most conservative opinion. Credit to Donald Kingsbury for the quote.
Honorable mention re: the same problem, "dogfooding"[0] is gone from the software industry, which is why users often feel like they're getting suckered by the companies they patronize; the decision makers, who don't themselves use the product, absolutely see the users as suckers.
[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eating_your_own_dog_food
So it's not necessarily that QA was useless, but that it was actively harmful
The alternative is what we see in politics and big corps:
1. tragedy happens
2. "leader" adds some checks to avoid the problem
3. the check literally will not stop the problem
4. everything sucks
And it's always a ratchet that goes in the same direction: More rules, more laws, more checks, more crap.
Example: Sweden had it's first mass school shooting and politicians suggest stuff like locking doors for unauthorized (the shooter was a student!).
A few years before that Sweden had a terrorist act where a dude jumped into a truck and drove into a crowd. What did the politicians do? Blame car companies for "not having a way to limit access to who can drive a car". Yes. They reinvented car keys. They also made everyone walk home instead of taking the subway. Did anyone die on the subway? No. Were the roads now CRAMMED with THOUSANDS of people in the middle of the road, making an extremely juicy terrorist target for someone with a truck? Yes, so much so that I was a bit scared walking home in a way I wouldn't have been if I wasn't now a part of a crowd for no damn reason.
Yeah, everyone who has any kind of online account should! It's number one on Ollam's preparedness checklist. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ihrGNGesfI
Speaking of, that "Use your eyes" image this ends with also could be boobs instead of eyes.