Yesterday's solutions are never adequate for the future.
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Answer:
I agree with the principle but not with the “never”. If the problem is really the same as yesterday’s problem, yesterday’s fix will solve it. My car had a fault, the mechanic tested it and his test gear showed it to be a known problem fixed by replacing a small filter. It is necessary to check first though, not assume it to be the same even if the symptoms are.
I can give you an example. I worked with IT systems, mainly to do with datacomms and networks. I was called in as a consultant to check and advise on a big problem with a robotic manufacturing plant. The suppliers of the system had been advised that there was a problem with the whole factory system stopping after two or three weeks operation and needing several hours to clear and restart. They had fixed a similar problem in another place by ugrading a network to a faster one and suggested they do that. That was very costly to implement running into millions of US dollars and independent confirmation was requested before commiting to it. I had equipment (and expertise!) the supplier did not and discovered that the fix they suggested would not work but could make it worse. New analysis showed this was a different problem not caused by the network but by a minor software error in the main control system. It was fixed in a couple of hours by a good programmer - at the expense of the supplier!
Confucious, he say “prediction can be very uncertain, especially concerning the future
Explanation:
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