I just thought at the time she was a very obvious way to make a new McCoy, but she wasn't the real McCoy.
I see what you did there lol
I also agree, that from a production point of view, she was a glaringly obvious attempt to introduce the kind of conflictual element that Bones represented on TOS, & while, at the time, it seemed kind of a cheap gimmick, in hindsight, I'm not bothered by it so much. True, Pulaski was, in a way, a knockoff of Bones, but in a similar way, so too was Data a knockoff of Spock, or Riker a knockoff of Kirk. So maybe Pulaski shouldn't be judged to harshly for that element, as it wasn't the only time they'd harkened back to TOS archetypes, & they were doing new interesting things with them
Admittedly, as a guy, I did find Crusher a more esthetically pleasing presence, which unfortunately worked against my impression of Pulaski, but again, in hindsight, that's not really a mark against her either, as a character, & conversely, her character truthfully represented a much better potential for character growth & interesting dynamics than Crusher ever did.
Honestly, Pulaski IS the better character, but for a lot of other reasons, it just didn't fit. The only real issue I have against her, as a Starfleet officer, & Star Trek character is how wildly inappropriate her prejudice against Data played. It was only a few comments here & there, but because the character was so short-lived, it leaves a legacy of being way more off-putting than I think was the intention.
Sure, I can see now that the plan was to have her start out being ill-prepared to accept an artificial life form, but something tells me they were going to go somewhere profoundly interesting with that, & that by some time later on, she'd maybe have become one of his closest friends & strongest advocates, because she had been so thoroughly enlightened, for our viewing pleasure
Sometimes the most endearing characters start out as wholly unlikable or even antagonistic, like Winchester on MASH or Benjamin Linus on LOST, but they grow & you witness them become better people, or you see the whole of their story fleshed out, such that you identify with them, being the way they are. Those are the more fruitful bonds to build with a character imho