![]() My colleagues have also worked some Excel magic to show the general trend of the amount of bugs in the system over time. These 10,000 bugs also contain quite a few feature requests, because we use the same system to track those, but anyhow, it is still 10,000 cases of fixes and refinements to the “base” products (memoQ, memoQ server, and the APIs), the newer ones (qTerm, TM repository, and the upcoming web based translation module), as well as all the documentation, the Kilgray web site, localization, and our back-end system for product activation. Also, these 10,000 bugs are almost all fixed now, and are the product of several years of software development, covering all the functionality of every Kilgray product: no single user ever encountered more than 1% of this over the years. If you have no or little experience with software management, 10,000 bugs might look scary, but as far as I can tell, it is a fact of life: developers and even designers make mistakes, and there can always be new ideas to make something even better. I don’t have any basis for comparison, as Kilgray is the first software development company I have worked for, but hey, this is a great number, isn’t it. ![]() ![]() Yesterday, we filed the 10,000th bug report in our issue tracking system. I’m very fond of expressive and beautiful infographics and data visualizations, but for now, this is all I could come up with. ![]()
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