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by AtticusTheGreat 3366 days ago
I know you probably meant "gold standard" but I was amused thinking about what a golf standard might mean ;)
2 comments

I just assumed "golf standard" was some QA term I hadn't heard of before.
It could be part of MIL-SPEC evaluation. They'd be concerned with how many times you could hit the evaluated product with a golf club before its effectiveness degraded. Also how many times before it stopped working. These numbers would provide actionable intelligence to acquisitions officers in the military on how to order just enough replacements for given scenarios while minimizing the amount of unnecessary orders.

Long story short, applying the golf standard in your QA process can both increase longevity of the product and reduce replacement costs. Many government organizations and enterprises running mission-critical applications might find DragonflyBSD servers attractive if they passed the golf standard. They could combine it with their Five 9's middleware.

Why do you assume he meant "gold standard"? Have you ever seen how fast a golf ball flies just after a strong hit?
Never from the point of view I'd like to see it from.