> even if they have advertised their product as production ready, shouldn't the developer have some kind of backup plan?
I mean, realistically, yes, because come on, everybody knows this sort of thing doesn't actually work.
However, this isn't really an excuse for the vendor. If you buy, say, a gas central heating boiler, and install as directed, and it explodes, burning down your house, then the manufacturer does not get to turn around and say "oh, well, you know, you should have known that we have no idea what we're doing; why didn't you build your house entirely out of asbestos?"
> come on, everybody knows this sort of thing doesn't actually work.
:)
then everybody should know things doesn't actually work on other side and no need to complain about it.
I think your example is slightly misleading, better example would be: imagine you are buying drugs, and you might die from overdose and you still decided to try and die, LLM is exactly this
No, this product is intended to be used like this. That’s the key. If someone does something with your product which is against usage directions, and hits themselves, that’s generally largely on them (presuming that the product flaw isn’t really bizarrely expected). If they follow directions and get hurt, that’s on you.
I mean, realistically, yes, because come on, everybody knows this sort of thing doesn't actually work.
However, this isn't really an excuse for the vendor. If you buy, say, a gas central heating boiler, and install as directed, and it explodes, burning down your house, then the manufacturer does not get to turn around and say "oh, well, you know, you should have known that we have no idea what we're doing; why didn't you build your house entirely out of asbestos?"