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Using the first buyers of a new product as beta testers is a business practice pioneered by the USA a long time ago. Companies that did this easily beat their European counterparts who spent additional months testing all the bugs out of their products only to find that the customers had already bought the bug filled American product because it was first to market.
It's probably worth considering just how much of the UMI Z _does_ work correctly. I suspect that the UMI engineering team actually fixed a lot of bugs before the initial release, but the release date was set while the phone was still in development, which leaves the engineering team in a tricky position
We're doing exactly what UMI needs us to do, but finding and documenting UMI Z bugs in this forum, and the engineers are probably fixing those bugs as we raise them. However fixing software bugs is the easy part, while making a new software release also requires checking that all the bug fixes haven't broken anything else, and that the software upgrade doesn't brick any phones running previous buggy versions. An engineer who is preparing a ROM upgrade isn't fixing any bugs, so rolling out very frequent upgrades quickly becomes counter productive.
That said, I don't like waiting a long time for bug fixes either, and looking at the ROM part of the forum suggests that UMI tends to roll out software upgrades for new products fairly frequently. The upgrade to Android 7 will probably present an interesting challenge to the software engineers who are still trying to make regular bug fix releases on Android 6 though. |
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