Joel Spolsky:
The “cost” of code inventory is huge. It might add up to six or twelve months of work that is stuck in the assembly line and not yet in customers’ hands. This could be the difference between having a cutting-edge product (iPhone) or constantly playing catchup (Windows Phone).
A great line when it was written in 2012, now aged to perfection.
The reason I’m linking to this article though, is the timeless wisdom about bug tracking that has stuck with me since the first time I read it:
At some point you realize that you’ve put too much work into the bug database and not quite enough work into the product.
- Suggestion: use a triage system to decide if a bug is even worth recording.
- Do not allow more than two weeks (in fix time) of bugs to get into the bug database.
- If you have more than that, stop and fix bugs until you feel like you’re fixing stupid bugs. Then close as “won’t fix” everything left in the bug database. Don’t worry, the severe bugs will come back.