The designers on my project actually designed such a non-telling unprofessional-tone "oops" error page.
Colleague implemented it like that, but on review we agreed it's just bad, and suggested/implemented an actually useful, professional error page.
It baffles me how people can implement actively useless stuff like that. And it even showed up in my team. I was somewhat surprised. I'm glad I'm Lead, and have direct communication with the customer. Two ways to prevent and improve things like that. At least in my projects.
The designers on my project actually designed such a non-telling unprofessional-tone "oops" error page.
Colleague implemented it like that, but on review we agreed it's just bad, and suggested/implemented an actually useful, professional error page.
It baffles me how people can implement actively useless stuff like that. And it even showed up in my team. I was somewhat surprised. I'm glad I'm Lead, and have direct communication with the customer. Two ways to prevent and improve things like that. At least in my projects.
You're a good team lead, then. A lazier person would have just shipped the unhelpful error and called it a day.