furwarm6

 Location: Dadeville, New Hampshire, United States

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 Website: https://www.mt-spot.com/

 User Description: I decided to dabble with my culinary skills today. I made the north Indian delicacy, Cholae (garbanzo beans). I took my job pretty seriously, adding the thousand 500 (kidding) ingredients at the proper time, and in right proportions. So, when the stuff found a boil, it was time to taste it to confirm that everything was OK. I had to do the tasting twice before convincing myself everything was ok. However, the complete process threw open a few pre-determined questions which people might experience within their professional lives. The cooking part could be related to the "development" of something, and the tasting part could be related to the "verification" of the merchandise. Take the semiconductor industry for example. This industry is consumed by the necessity for verification. The time it requires to verify something far exceeds the time to build up the product to begin with. Every second year, a new standard emerges. While, development has mostly been limited to Verilog language, verification has gone from C++ to systemVerilog to VMM to OVM for you name it.So, how much verification is too much verification? In your kitchen parlance, when should I stop tasting the food? If I search for eternal quality, I might continue tasting the food until I've either consumed all the food, or it really is well past dinner time. On the other hand, I could do it just once, make some changes to my preparation and call it done. The former approach will ensure nobody gets food. The latter approach will ensure everyone gets bad food. The end result in both cases is the same: hungry and angry people. Similarly, over-verification delays the product's time to market, rendering it essentially useless. Under verification causes production stops, which again hits the company's schedule, and its reputation in the industry takes a nose dive.The main element to successful products is to find the right balance to make sure that the end product is excellent, but not perfect. The quest for perfection is like the 80-20 rule. It is relatively easy to get the merchandise to 80% quality, but the last twenty percent becomes progressively harder. So, a 95% product quality may be acceptable to many customers, and achievable in reasonable time. With regards to the type of product, hanging out over the last 5% might not be cost efficient. On the other hand, enough effort should be spent to obtain the product from 80 to 95%. If this is not done, the product will not be usable.In kitchen parlance, a whole lot depends on what I do with my first tasting. Based on how well I analyze the taste, I could make a significant progress between your first and the second tasting. 먹튀검증사이트 would just add salt, only to realize later that I added an excessive amount of salt. Then I would add something else to neutralize the salt and find yourself running in circles. The smart me would analyze the amount of salt required, and also recognize that certain ingredients are missing. I would add them in the proper quantity, and by enough time I taste again, my dish would have improved significantly.Similarly, a verification engineer can prefer to get dumb or smart. A dumb engineer usually would come back with a one line statement that reads "code crashed on line 1293". The developer would return back, repair the problem and send the code back to the verification guy. His second report would read "code crashed in line 1324". Now, when the code at 1394 is fixed, it could crash online 1293!!! The code would be ping-ponged between your developer and the verification engineer, until the developer, verification engineer and the manager are fired for not releasing the product on time. The smart verification engineer will read the architecture specification and will have full knowledge of the merchandise. He will understand the root cause of the problem, and offer as much details as possible to the developer. The developer will then fix many problems within a iteration, thereby reducing his workload, as well as that of the verification engineer. I wish life were so easy!!!

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