I disagree, but I get where you're coming from - which is exactly what the problem with this list is. The Joel Test was great because everything on it was universally accepted as something that every developer would want to happen where they worked. With this, different developers are going to have different opinions of many things on the list, making the "score" lose it's usefulness, since now every time a company has less than a perfect score, I need to figure out why (is it because they don't have a library? I don't care so much about that. Is it because they don't have CI? I care a lot about that.)