Branch (
branchandroot) wrote2009-04-08 11:01 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Entry tags:
In which Dreamwidth is not Microsoft
So, as Dreamwidth approaches the next big production step, I thought it would be worthwhile to make a post about this thing that comes next.
Next is open beta.
Open beta is NOT site launch.
Contrary to what Microsoft has tried to train the public to think for lo these many long years, "open beta" does not equal "stable product". Open beta is the smoke test. It's when we say "this seems pretty stable and the big things are done, it's time to load it up and jump up and down on it and see where the smoke comes out so we can fix that before actual product launch".
Site launch, in another handful of months, is what will declare "yes, this product is stable". Site launch is where we say "okay, this is a (though not the because we keep developing) stable product, this is version 1.0, we're open for all public business".
So, for those who are thinking of coming in during open beta, remember, not everything will be done. Not everything will work. It is just about certain that we will break something as we jump up and down on it at full load. Because that's what open beta means.
Come ahead, intrepid testers and explorers! Just remember this is not Microsoft and no one is pretending that it's all done and ready yet.
Next is open beta.
Open beta is NOT site launch.
Contrary to what Microsoft has tried to train the public to think for lo these many long years, "open beta" does not equal "stable product". Open beta is the smoke test. It's when we say "this seems pretty stable and the big things are done, it's time to load it up and jump up and down on it and see where the smoke comes out so we can fix that before actual product launch".
Site launch, in another handful of months, is what will declare "yes, this product is stable". Site launch is where we say "okay, this is a (though not the because we keep developing) stable product, this is version 1.0, we're open for all public business".
So, for those who are thinking of coming in during open beta, remember, not everything will be done. Not everything will work. It is just about certain that we will break something as we jump up and down on it at full load. Because that's what open beta means.
Come ahead, intrepid testers and explorers! Just remember this is not Microsoft and no one is pretending that it's all done and ready yet.
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The important part is that they really fix things that are broken in the open beta for the launch, and don't ignore very important problems in the name of redesigning profile pages AHAHAHA ._.
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Though profile redesign is on the agenda, eventually! *laughing*