Many refer to 99% as extremely good. But is it really!? Have a look at the results when 99% is achieved: - 119,760 income tax returns processed incorrectly this year.
- 144 incorrect medical procedures daily
- 110,600 mismatched pairs of shoes shipped this year
- 18 babies given to the wrong parents each day
- 23,666 defective computers shipped this year
- 22,792 pieces of mail will be mishandled in the next hour
- 2,434,300 books will be sent in the next 12 months with the wrong cover
- 20,000 incorrect drug prescriptions written in the next 12 months
- 56,700 checks deducted from false bank accounts in the next hour
- 67 pacemaker operations performed incorrectly this year
- 315 entries in the most recent Webster’s New International Dictionary of the English Language will be misspelled
- 69 malfunctioning ATMs will be installed in the next 12 months
- 810 commercial airline flights crash every month
- 880,000 credit cards in circulation will turn out to have incorrect cardholder information on their magnetic strips
- 2 million documents will be lost by the IRS this year
- 2 plane landings daily at O’Hare International Airport in Chicago will be unsafe
So, is 99% really good enough???? Would you want to be a part of that 1%?
In the tech industry, the uptime of services and systems is a crucial metric that garners significant attention. Microsoft Azure boasts an impressive uptime, exceeding 99%. Microsoft asserts that most of their services achieve an uptime of 99.9%. This equates to just 43 minutes and 28 seconds of downtime each month. Have an amazing week!
This is re-published from the weekly email sent by Leonard Mack entitled The Propeller. To subscribe, visit https://www.LeonardMack.com/subscribe and read it every Sunday evening.
This intellectual nourishment is intended for informational purposes only. One should not construe anything herein as being legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.
My rule is this – I have no advice to give, only experience to share. I have no interest in being a guru or telling people what they should do. Rather, I share my own experience because there is no right or wrong. Your mileage may vary. |