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: In real life, those it is a different person. In all companies I worked at, we had at least one senior engineer. He was responsible for the team of coders, or not, but he always had his modules to care about (own them, manage them, set vision and directions), and was also coding. | : In real life, those it is a different person. In all companies I worked at, we had at least one senior engineer. He was responsible for the team of coders, or not, but he always had his modules to care about (own them, manage them, set vision and directions), and was also coding. | ||
There's a huge difference (also in the way of how you use Bugzilla) if you're project/product manager, and module manager. Product/project manager doesn't care about the module consistency, API, vision of development, ABI, etc. He cares if there are no crashers, bugs are solved fast, features are implemented etc. Module owner cares about any single change that happens to his module. | : There's a huge difference (also in the way of how you use Bugzilla) if you're project/product manager, and module manager. Product/project manager doesn't care about the module consistency, API, vision of development, ABI, etc. He cares if there are no crashers, bugs are solved fast, features are implemented etc. Module owner cares about any single change that happens to his module. --[[User:Gandalf|gandalf]] 19:05, 27 June 2006 (PDT) | ||