Robustness and ruggedness are like giving your toy a superpower so it can handle being dropped, squished, or bumped around without breaking.
Imagine you have two blocks: one is soft and squishy, like a pillow. The other is hard and strong, like a brick. If you drop the pillow block from a table, it might just flatten a little. But if you drop the brick block, it might not even move! That’s robustness, being able to handle tough situations without breaking.
Now think about playing with your blocks on a bumpy road in a toy car. The soft block might get squished every time the car hits a bump. But the hard block stays strong no matter what. That's ruggedness, being able to stay strong even when things get rough or repeated.
So, when something is both robust and rugged, it’s like having that brick block in your toy car: it can handle big drops and bumpy roads without any trouble!
Examples
- A toy car keeps moving even when you drop it from a height.
- A bridge stays strong during heavy traffic and storms.
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See also
- What is Scalability?
- Who is Enhanced Modularity?
- What are functional principles?
- 5 cm to inches?
- 1212 ~ Number Synchronicities ~ Are You Seeing This ?