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Nice classic strawman argument there, "You dislike item A so I'm incorrect for pointing out issues with statement B." The two items are in no way related. I'm not defending Microsoft, I'm pointing out that the author's statement of that functionality being a bug is incorrect. Regardless of who makes the software or how many people dislike the way it behaves the feature being discussed is, within the bounds of its design, not incorrectly implemented. Whether the design is flawed or not is an entirely different argument.
While you are technically correct, your argument is a bit facetious on the grounds that any bug can be converted into a feature, simply by stating intent.
For instance, I often joke with QA that bug X is actually a feature. If it's deliberate, then it can't be a bug right?
Bottom line though, if your software breaks other installed software, then that's a bug in my opinion, whether it is intended or not.







Member since:
2005-09-06
Why are you defending Microsoft's stance that they control the MBR and can tell everyone what to put on it, and how to?
I am surprised they have not been sued over it yet, and I wish they would for how annoying it is to fix it every time that messy windows guy comes back to my house.