That's all very well until you consider the following things.
1. Serious bugs do still exist. A few months ago I joined JJB and I actually spend quite a bit of time there answering yuku-related and other technical queries. I have a good idea of the issues that occur (I'm sure the staff are aware too). I know it comes and goes, but the "being logged in as other users" bug is a serious security problem that has been around for some time - why isn't that fixed yet?
2. A lot of people at JJB asked for the ignore feature and they thought they'd be getting it when JJB moved to yuku. In the end it took a few months for that feature to appear, and it was me who provided them with a workaround in the meantime (albeit Firefox only). Then they got ignore and were very happy... until it broke, maybe one or two weeks later. Now, is that a serious problem? Can you imagine how many people have been let down as a result of that? The bug hasn't even existed for a whole week but I don't think they'd agree that it's an unimportant bug - and this is a majority of users.
3. Small bugs may not be much problem on their own, but added together they become a lot worse. The example I gave showed that it wasn't just one bug but two bugs in the same part of the system. That makes the pain twice as bad. Add that together with the IE7 issues that were "fixed but not fixed" and you wonder why it's gone on as long as it has.
1. Serious bugs do still exist. A few months ago I joined JJB and I actually spend quite a bit of time there answering yuku-related and other technical queries. I have a good idea of the issues that occur (I'm sure the staff are aware too). I know it comes and goes, but the "being logged in as other users" bug is a serious security problem that has been around for some time - why isn't that fixed yet?
2. A lot of people at JJB asked for the ignore feature and they thought they'd be getting it when JJB moved to yuku. In the end it took a few months for that feature to appear, and it was me who provided them with a workaround in the meantime (albeit Firefox only). Then they got ignore and were very happy... until it broke, maybe one or two weeks later. Now, is that a serious problem? Can you imagine how many people have been let down as a result of that? The bug hasn't even existed for a whole week but I don't think they'd agree that it's an unimportant bug - and this is a majority of users.
3. Small bugs may not be much problem on their own, but added together they become a lot worse. The example I gave showed that it wasn't just one bug but two bugs in the same part of the system. That makes the pain twice as bad. Add that together with the IE7 issues that were "fixed but not fixed" and you wonder why it's gone on as long as it has.
