| ▲ | Veserv 9 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
To add on, engineering is about objective guarantees to meet objective responsibility. This bridge is rated for 10 tons. This chemical process produces 1 mg 99% purity crystals. This biological process produces 90% pure insulin. This circuit handles 1 kA. Engineering is not about better or worse it is about acceptable or unacceptable. This naturally results in a desire for requirements so you can meet your guarantees. Specifications so you know what guarantees you need or what you are provided and how those map back to the real responsibility. Standards so you can consistently solve common problems. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | rowanG077 8 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Engineering is most certainly about being better or worse. A key aspect of being an engineer is that you can make conscious trade offs that include time, cost and feasability among others. It's not always a good choice the make the minimal thing that ticks of all the must requirements. In all cases there are unstated requirements that any engineer worth their salty will think and ask about. If you dont the that's how you get angry customers. That's how you get shitty quality bridges and buildings or cost blowouts. That's how you get bug ridden software. That's how you get the windows start menu. | |||||||||||||||||
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