Quote from article "We need to move faster. Validation at Intel is taking much longer than it does for our competition. We need to do whatever we can to reduce those times… we can’t live forever in the shadow of the early 90’s FDIV bug, we need to move on. Our competition is moving much faster than we are".<p>Competition pressure could make a company's new product worse than (in this case, less stable than) their previous products, e.x. Samsung phone explosion. I still remembered the story was Samsung wanting to release their phone ahead of iPhone and I would imagine the testing went through a similar stressful time as Intel.<p>Of course not all cases of taking such risks would lead to disasters - just imagine Intel rushes on releasing new chips ahead of competition and 99 out of 100 times it ended up performing well. But a unique character in Intel's case is these bugs, unlike a faulty battery design, are accumulative and additive to future product development, which means a few small wins in catching up with your competitor could also lead to massive failures in some next major battle.<p>Now imagine Intel's competitors are going through the exact same scenario. One possible outcome is both Intel and its competitors' products become less stable and more buggy over time, and until everyone's stuff seems to be broken they probably never have time to fix them.