Basically if your soldering iron was not hot enough for the solder to flow properly into the joint, it could create a "cold" solder joint - which is just a solder joint that is not making a good electrical connection. Usually good joints are shiny and bad ones have a dull finish, but that is not always the case. I run the temperature way up when soldering big items like the triacs. It's hard to get them hot enough unless you have a really good soldering iron as the center lead is thermaly (and sometimes electrically) bonded to the heat sink...
The other part of RJ's message describes what happens electrically if you have a cold solder joint. Basically the full 120v gets put across the resistor and lets out the magic smoke - man does that stuff stink... <yk..
A solder bridge is when a blob of solder connects two things that should not be connected. These happen if there is excess solder on two joints that are close together... the easy fix is to clean all of the solder off the tip of your iron using a wet sponge while the iron is hot, then touch the iron on the blob. Repeat as needed until the solder separates leaving two separate joints.
RM