Where is the "every 30 minutes" coming from? You and another commenter have both used this identical phrase.It sounds as though the complaint was not because a patch hadn't been applied after 30 minutes, or even 30 days or 30 weeks. More like 30 months.
I said "every 30 minutes" as a piece of hyperbole, in my original comment.
I'm not really sure why everyone is focusing on that phrase, though. I think it's pretty clear if you read any of the source material, as said, that that is not an accurate representation of what was going on, and I would have also expected "every 30 minutes" to be a pretty clearly hyperbolic expectation for anyone to process updates after.
> I'm not really sure why everyone is focusing on that phrase, though
Is everyone focusing on the phrase? I thought I asked about it, and that's all that's happened.
> I would have also expected "every 30 minutes" to be a pretty clearly hyperbolic expectation for anyone to process updates after
I couldn't imagine a benign use of hyperbole in timeliness when some expectations of timeliness are silly, and some are sensible. I thought I'd ask, in case there was a good faith reason for it, rather than just assume you're trying to use insinuation to change people's minds.