| ▲ | 28304283409234 a day ago | |||||||
It misunderstood my comment. I never did understand the philosophy of _moving fast and breaking things_. Instead I move intentionally: slow and therefore fast. | ||||||||
| ▲ | roman-holovin a day ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
This whole thread is trainwreck. Your initial comment is three simple sentences with very little room for misunderstanding yet here we are. Then there is a comment on that comment which is self-promotion of LLM-trash published as blog post. One would think should an easy donwvote, but it is not. Then, a dude who pointed out this lame self-promotion is donwvoted into oblivion, because what? Bunch of people cannot think of three seconds and use their eyes to try to understand what's lame about that? I'll have to switch to farming, I swear. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | Izkata 17 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
In that case, scrolling down, the other replies don't get it quite right either. An alternate way of phrasing that one would be "innovation over stability/perfectionism". It came from Facebook, where users can tolerate some minor breakage, in an era when they were cranking out all sorts features and overtaking MySpace. I think the idea is generally understood to be a good thing in the startup stage where the goal is to disrupt existing competition - if you take too long to get to market, whatever you're doing might not matter anymore. | ||||||||