• @[email protected]
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    251 day ago

    How did that not get caught in the prototype stage? Like, did nobody ever test that thing with that type of RJ45 plug?

    • @Maalus
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      2922 hours ago

      Because making shit / design isn’t as easy as most think. You think of a million things and then the millionth-and-one screws you over.

      • @I_Has_A_Hat
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        2421 hours ago

        Early in my engineering career, I was told that a screw hole on a part needed to be increased one size. Not knowing any better, I increased the size but made the thread count the same. Little did I know that the machine shop head had recently gotten unfairly grilled by management about following engineering drawings to a T, and had adopted an attitude of malicious compliance. So rather than reach out to engineering to check if they really needed this obscure thread size, he instead just went ahead and purchased a new $7000 threading tool for that size that would never be used again.

        I learned a lot that day about common fastener sizes and to always be nice to the machine shop head.

        • @Maalus
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          818 hours ago

          Oh yeah, the magical “chart”. As a tiny company / machinist shop I dread the day I have to order everything on it. But at the end of the day, it saves people hassle and you always have what you need. Luckily so far I only make stuff for my own use in the main job, which is injection molding.

    • slazer2au
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      191 day ago

      It was only a particular kind of RJ45 boot that caused the issue, so if you are sensible and don’t use a cable boot you never ran into the issue.

      • @[email protected]
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        2324 hours ago

        Just saying, this is not the fault of a single engineer but of a whole company that didn’t think “try all common cable types” should be a required testing step before a network switch goes into mass production.

        • slazer2au
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          824 hours ago

          You don’t have to test every cable boot. Just have a design guide that says “Don’t put buttons above or below ports.”

      • @[email protected]
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        520 hours ago

        i choose to believe this particular engineer saw the potential for this issue, but just hated those cables with a burning passion.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 hours ago

        if you are sensible and don’t use a cable boot you never ran into the issue.

        Uh… huh? What, you’re anti-boot?

        • Shadow
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          723 hours ago

          Boots suck. Good connectors just have the tab be more of an inverted V shape, so it doesn’t catch but you don’t need to squish a hard plastic boot to remove it.

      • Rob Bos
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        422 hours ago

        I could see it also being a problem if you’re trying to remove a cable with a stuck latch. Wiggle it around a bit, accidentally hold down the button… oops