> Occasionally, it is because of that though. If not 'stupid', at least inexperienced. I've had plenty of things I've done that worked, but were, in hindsight, 'stupid' (and have been called out on that). Sometimes, people try to make a lot of post-hoc justifications for a block of code or a data/tech decision that really is, just... 'stupid'. Again, that's more likely down to inexperience than anything else, but not every decision is a 'good' one just because people 'had their reasons'.
I agree on the point regarding the decision being 'stupid' but in this case it was not because of inexperience. On the contrary, it was because an overruling decision by an experienced manager. So the point is that it is not always technical or due to inexperience (though that does happen) - from what I've seen, it is quite common for such things to happen due to hierarchical/ego/political issues as well.
you're not wrong, but there's a whole class of problems that occur outside 'enterprise' structures. Often it's just a lone cowboy building something for a small business, and the business owner have absolutely no way to determine if what's being delivered is 'good' in any meaningful sense.
I agree on the point regarding the decision being 'stupid' but in this case it was not because of inexperience. On the contrary, it was because an overruling decision by an experienced manager. So the point is that it is not always technical or due to inexperience (though that does happen) - from what I've seen, it is quite common for such things to happen due to hierarchical/ego/political issues as well.