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by Chris_Newton 88 days ago
Speed actually just wins, because we are usually constrained by time.

Sorry, but I don’t understand what you mean here. What do we win by being faster at producing the wrong things?

1 comments

You learn more quickly that you are producing the wrong thing.
Do you ? It takes a some introspection. People can be in denial despite the feedback from reality.
This implies that

1) a lot of shallow, orthogonal directions is better than 1 deep, careful approach

2) There's no social aspect to churning out a bunch of slop that will affect the perception of potential "right things" later. My domain can be particularly grudgeful in this regard.

1) If there is uncertainty, that seems to be correct, yes. (If there is no uncertainty, then the question and the essay become moot: You already know what to do. Things take as long as they must. Worst case, you are wrong.)

2) I read that part twice and could not figure out what it is you are trying to say.