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by Aldo_MX
3543 days ago
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> I really enjoy how the author broke down both the problem and the solution, explaining why the existing solutions are inadequate. A thousand times this, I always get frustrated that every single product, tool or service has to have a lot of marketing gibberish, catchy slogans, etc., but zero explanations of what problems do they attempt to solve, or what was the motivation to create them. You usually are required to dig further in the documentation or look for an external reference to understand what's the real purpose behind a product, tool or service. |
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I actually wrote that tool based on a huge frustration I had going back and forth to the browser, and not being able to work while being agnostic to the services, which felt being a totally broken UX. I have then worked on that tool for a while, used it and refactored it a lot up until I'm happy using it.
All in all, when I'm doing a tool, I'm first doing it for myself (I might invent the DIFY concept, to override the DIY concept )… only then I'm sharing it with others.