Actually, yeah, probably. CPU scheduling isn’t the shiny new thing, nor something that gets that sweet, sweet monthly recurring revenue. So, it doesn’t get prioritized.
Microsoft always operates like this. Whatever bullshit management demands for marketing purposes takes the resources away from basic stability and quality improvements. Sometimes this results in quite predictable disaster:
Actually, yeah, probably. CPU scheduling isn’t the shiny new thing, nor something that gets that sweet, sweet monthly recurring revenue. So, it doesn’t get prioritized.
Microsoft always operates like this. Whatever bullshit management demands for marketing purposes takes the resources away from basic stability and quality improvements. Sometimes this results in quite predictable disaster:
Microsoft Chose Profit Over Security and Left U.S. Government Vulnerable to Russian Hack, Whistleblower Says