|
|
|
|
|
by muzani
671 days ago
|
|
I wonder if this is why there's a rise in A/B testing. We normally see very minor differences, like about 54% vs 46%, but we spend a lot of engineering effort collecting, storing, comparing this data. It seems like something we should just flip a coin over, but I guess it's an anti-bikeshedding method. |
|
As the engineer who's been in the "touch nothing" camp before, it's always because the risk/reward of making big changes to bad systems is really skewed towards things breaking and making me miserable.