Problems, boundaries, and relations.
Lucas Porter
Microsoft Engineer | Military Vet | Skill set: coding and implementing. | Expertise: exceptional diligence in remediating major production environment cloud computing systems down scenarios.
Something or a relationship can be ideally verified with multiple correlations. If a correlation is not found within one area that is found in another, typically it does not seem relevant to a particular area, and the problem can typically be assumed that it lies somewhere else or may not exist. It cannot be verified from a particular area because there is no known relation to it. Therefore, supporting data to verify the other information, and establishing a relationship and or acknowledgement and then comprehension. A relationship in this case can be the easiest way evidence can be gathered between two areas, prove a mutual existence, and can be the best way to collect evidence to prove an underlying root cause from multiple sources as you could see the start and end of the issue in a known problem area without known existing boundaries. Third party information from the two problem areas seemingly unrelated can be important knowing boundaries of separation, where exactly the problem may start and end, and if the two can be related and or understood from one another. Third party information can help with correlating new information that is not already known to one or both of the two areas obviously or otherwise, such as with weighing in on contradictory information from two areas and offering a new decision and view. Knowing boundaries of separation and understanding different areas with different behaviors can help with understanding issues as a whole and how they may relate and or be revealed across boundaries and or avoided in others.
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2 年Great read, and thanks for sharing!