|
|
|
|
|
by TeMPOraL
2428 days ago
|
|
Telemetry is a lazy, paternalistic way of improving user experience. It's a method that lets you ignore the actual feedback you're getting from your users, because that involves dealing with actual human beings - who don't always write politely or coherently. Telemetry lets you avoid collecting feedback in a way that respects the user - through in-house studies, by contracting with outside users to perform on-site studies, and just by asking people and reading what they say (and treating it seriously). GitLab, you're not a cut-throat company run by the Ferengi, desperate to eke out a tiny bit of extra profit by whatever means necessary. You have what it takes to do it right and set an example for others. |
|
Compared to direct user feedback where a user might use some functionality twice a year, but rank it high as something that needs to be improved because it's sort of backwards. Instead of improving the performance and flow of the functionality they use hundreds of times daily, because they're reasonably happy with how it works. It's not that you don't want to fix the former, but it's obviously not business critical to perform often, and it's not considered high priority yet.