| I don’t think that enterprise slowness and “verification” would prevent a suicide assistance application in this particular case, unless they were specifically testing for that which could be missed even with a rigid testing structure. > How about move fast and test/verify/validate shit instead? Because that inherently isn’t moving fast. I don’t completely agree with the “Move Fast And Break Shit” mantra myself, but I think it comes out of genuine frustrations from the enterprise world. I worked at a BigTechCo [1] in the past, and it felt like I would spend twenty minutes doing a ticket, and it would take two days for everyone to “verify” my PR. Even doing a quick fix for a null pointer exception can take three or four days to get deployed as a result of this. The stuff I was working on was not high stakes. I wasn’t dealing with money or medicine or pacemakers or weather analysis or anything like that. The Move Fast and Break Shit stuff comes as a bit of an overcorrection on this, but I think fundamentally the idea is that a lot of this stuff really isn’t that important, and it’s better to just deploy something that “probably works” and fix problems as they happen. [1] It’s not too hard to find based on my post history but I politely ask you do not post specifics here. |
Yet politicians continue to act like the government should operate like a business and for some reason all of us working in corporate America think this is a good idea...