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I'll do my best answering your questions.
Question 1: This is one of those questions that I lose no matter which way I answer. If I say I'm influential, then I get flamed when people want stuff, I get PM's for technical support, and then flamed when I can't keep up with them (SMA or not), and torched in general. If I say I'm not influential, then I get flamed for being a loser, and torched for how I can't help. Let's just say I'm influential enough to be heard.
Question 2: Spread out all over the world (this is necessary to handle the global needs of the software). Many are at our factories, or collect in groups in various software development offices worldwide.
Question 3: Honestly, I think the communication amongst coders is good. I think they have a great system of code writing, check in and out, and a good problem reporting system. Of course it's not perfect, nothing is.
Question 4: Bear in mind, it is IMPOSSIBLE to test every combination and permutation of computer (thousands's), video card (hundreds), drivers (tens of thousands), service packs (a few), CMM's (hundreds), controllers (tens to hundreds), sensors (hundreds), firmware (hundreds), and features (hundreds). Did I miss any? Do some quick math on that, and you see it's impossible. However, we do test MANY different ways. I can't detail them all here, but I'll give some examples. We test online, on every product that ships from a factory, and offline. Testing is done by coders (each coding change is tested), dedicated development testers, dedicated AE's that work for Wilcox who test applications, my group (applications engineers not in the software group), factory engineers for every hardware product including sensors, and our customer beta testers. We also have automated testing routines as well that run batteries of tests in constant loops. We have testing protocols that are run on every version of PC-DMIS that are huge. I'm sure I didn't hit on every test or tester, but that's a quick list.
PC-DMIS runs nearly any device, can do nearly any measurement, and is pretty intuitive. It's not easy being all of those things at once. But as I always say, it's something we strive for, it's what our customers (as a whole, all together) ask us to do.
-Brian
I'll do my best answering your questions.
Question 1: This is one of those questions that I lose no matter which way I answer. If I say I'm influential, then I get flamed when people want stuff, I get PM's for technical support, and then flamed when I can't keep up with them (SMA or not), and torched in general. If I say I'm not influential, then I get flamed for being a loser, and torched for how I can't help. Let's just say I'm influential enough to be heard.
Question 2: Spread out all over the world (this is necessary to handle the global needs of the software). Many are at our factories, or collect in groups in various software development offices worldwide.
Question 3: Honestly, I think the communication amongst coders is good. I think they have a great system of code writing, check in and out, and a good problem reporting system. Of course it's not perfect, nothing is.
Question 4: Bear in mind, it is IMPOSSIBLE to test every combination and permutation of computer (thousands's), video card (hundreds), drivers (tens of thousands), service packs (a few), CMM's (hundreds), controllers (tens to hundreds), sensors (hundreds), firmware (hundreds), and features (hundreds). Did I miss any? Do some quick math on that, and you see it's impossible. However, we do test MANY different ways. I can't detail them all here, but I'll give some examples. We test online, on every product that ships from a factory, and offline. Testing is done by coders (each coding change is tested), dedicated development testers, dedicated AE's that work for Wilcox who test applications, my group (applications engineers not in the software group), factory engineers for every hardware product including sensors, and our customer beta testers. We also have automated testing routines as well that run batteries of tests in constant loops. We have testing protocols that are run on every version of PC-DMIS that are huge. I'm sure I didn't hit on every test or tester, but that's a quick list.
PC-DMIS runs nearly any device, can do nearly any measurement, and is pretty intuitive. It's not easy being all of those things at once. But as I always say, it's something we strive for, it's what our customers (as a whole, all together) ask us to do.
-Brian
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