| Equipment: The boxes and software that will run your site, tool, database, whatever. |
| Backend Programming: Writing stored procedures for the database, setting up data sources, creating daemons, etc. |
| Webserver Integration: Hooking up the backend systems to the webserver and writing procedures and/or functions to surface them to the webserver. |
| Frontend Integration: Using the stuff written by the previous step to build the actual pages returned to the user. |
| Users: Ummm, they use it. The "intended audience", if you will. |
Cost-cutting measures during development made in the sake of saving time or money save neither. Every mistake made that isn't fixed wastes the time of the next person to work on the project. If the next step involves multiple people, you've multiplied that waste by the number of people who have to compensate. No matter how much your backend developers make, it's not enough to justify wasting the time and talent of the people who take over. The same goes for everyone else involved. When building something, do your part right. Talk to the people who will be using what you produce. Let's say you're in the webserver integration group and you're writing something that will be used by 20 people. Talk to them and make sure you're not doing something that will make them have to work around your product instead of using it as intended.
This all boils down to usability. The principles of usability don't go out the door just because it's software and not a webpage. Writing crappy code because it takes you less time is no excuse. It's the poorest of excuses because you've just inflicted a giant time and money waster on the people who then have to use it. So, think before you code, please? Say it with me: I will not write crappy code. I will do things the right way, deadlines be damned!
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