It's always a good idea to file a bug report, even if you cannot consistently reproduce the glitch. Just report what you were doing when the glitch happened. There may be something in your report which, when added to other similar reports, highlights a pattern that will allow the software developers at Apple to narrow their focus to a specific chunk of code.
You would think that tech companies could get crowdsourced data and jump on it. Of course, bug reports are great,
When I start up my computer and see a black space where there is meant to be a menubar it doesn't seem right to me.
when i start my computer it works fine.
the fact is bugs happen. i use Windows 8.1 at work -- have you *seen* the sheer number of updates to Windows? the presence of bugs alone isnt a good indicator of value, imo.
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It's always a good idea to file a bug report, even if you cannot consistently reproduce the glitch. Just report what you were doing when the glitch happened. There may be something in your report which, when added to other similar reports, highlights a pattern that will allow the software developers at Apple to narrow their focus to a specific chunk of code.
You would think that tech companies could get crowdsourced data and jump on it. Of course, bug reports are great,
When I start up my computer and see a black space where there is meant to be a menubar it doesn't seem right to me.
when i start my computer it works fine.
the fact is bugs happen. i use Windows 8.1 at work -- have you *seen* the sheer number of updates to Windows? the presence of bugs alone isnt a good indicator of value, imo.
They need to not add any new features.
yes, because not adding new features is what's brought the industry & company to new heights.
What got them here is quality software and hardware.
I don't get your point.
Are you saying it's no longer quality because there are "bugs"?
Are you saying it used to be quality despite having "bugs"?
You are not really following this thread are you?
Click on those links provided by Ireland.