“In the design plans for the system, the word ‘main’ was used inconsistently between the device that sends the electric signals, and the device that receives the signals,” NASA said in a written statement. "On the signal side, ‘main’ meant the main parachute. In contrast, on the receiver side ‘main’ was used as a reference to a pyrotechnic that fires to release the parachute canister cover and deploy the drogue.
“Engineers connected the two mains, causing the parachute deployment actions to occur out of order,” NASA said.
I used to work as a technical writer and I always got shat on by engineers who worked along the lines of “real men don’t write documentation”. But those guys won’t read this because reading is just too hard for them.
I’m not saying all engineers are like that. I’ve met a few capable ones. But the mediocre and less than mediocre ones usually have the biggest chips on their shoulders.
The LEGO name is always spelled in all capital letters and the bricks (and/or elements) must always be referred to as “LEGO bricks” (or “LEGO elements”) – never “LEGOs” or “legos”.
And
The first time the Trademarks appear in a headline and in the following text, they should be accompanied by the relevant symbol: the LEGO trademark and SERIOUS PLAY by the ®symbol
Thereafter, the symbols need not to be used more on the same page, or in the same chapter.
I used to work as a technical writer and I always got shat on by engineers who worked along the lines of “real men don’t write documentation”. But those guys won’t read this because reading is just too hard for them.
I guess I’m not a real man. I read documentation as a hobby. Started with Legos, and now it’s reading component i2s communication tables…
I’m not saying all engineers are like that. I’ve met a few capable ones. But the mediocre and less than mediocre ones usually have the biggest chips on their shoulders.
Fine, I’ll be that person: *Lego :)
Just let it gos
Technically the word LEGO® is always written in full capitals because it’s a trademark.
And
Why wasn’t this tested?