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by somat 35 days ago
As opposed to the old mechanics koan "Buy once cry once"

But sure, in general if you don't know what you are doing start cheap and treat it like a learning opportunity.

The real danger is in when you use shitty tools and think that because of that you are bad at something, so give up.

My personal story on this was when I hosed a laptop(don't disable usb when there are only usb devices) All the normal ways to fix it were not working so I went way out of my comfort zone and was going to try and reflash it the hard way with a chip programmer(It's already a brick I am not going to break it further) And I bought the cheapest sioc flashing kit I could find. and... nothing was working right, and because I have no idea what I am doing, does it just not work? do I have the wrong programmer? should I desolder the chip from the board? No clue. So it sat on the healing bench for a year. Then I stumbled on a forum thread complaining about cheap sioc clips, gathered my courage and bought a nice clip, tried again and it worked the first time. So on one level thanks Pomona electronics, your sioc clip was amazing, but the bigger lesson, I thought the task was just too unknowable and really I just had bad tools.

1 comments

and think that because of that you are bad at something, so give up.

If you are learning a meaningfully new domain, you are bad at it.

If that causes you to give up, you are giving up on learning.

And in the case of your repair, the fact that the broken system sat on the bench for a year while you learned more meant that you did not give up.

Meaningful adult learning of new domains takes years. If something doesn't it either is not a new domain or the standard of performance is not an adult standard.

Finally, you could have bought the more expensive programmer first, but you might not have had the skill and knowledge and relevant experience to use it properly a year earlier...or to put it another way, you didn't have the direct experience to recognize the value of the post on which tool to use until after you had direct experience.

Buying tools twice or three or four times is just "the cost of doing business." You can't make an informed decision until you have experience.