I can't count the times I've been in similar situations. Finding the problem, when it is unique to itself, is relatively easy. But just as soon as there are two issues that combine to create the problem, the diagnosis becomes very tricky. Three issues can be nearly hopeless, even when each is simple.
I can't count the times I've been in similar situations. Finding the problem, when it is unique to itself, is relatively easy. But just as soon as there are two issues that combine to create the problem, the diagnosis becomes very tricky. Three issues can be nearly hopeless, even when each is simple.
I swear, problems do NOT come in a random distribution. Murphy banks them for future use.
Probably. But statistics itself says that you can't expect the problems to distribute evenly.