You know how some software feels "enterprisey"? That has little to do with the use case of the software or who buys it. It's a symptom it was built by people who weren't using it. All software where the design process is disconnected from the UX eventually feels enterprisey.
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so true
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What’s your opinion on ML-UX?
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I guess it’s
#mlux
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So why so so many people at Google don’t do that?
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Agreed. I feel execution speed is chosen with the idea that “metrics” and “data” will help you correct the product. But to your point, if you miss the direction, metrics and data will simply give you an optimized (wrong) local.
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It improves execution velocity too if not speed.
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This is one of the challenges of many agile projects. Agile is better at telling you how fast you are going, than whether you're getting closer to where you need to go. (Not agile's fault, but somewhat it's nature)
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> using the product yourself This also applies to many models created in research: When you actually use your NER / Parser / Q&A / NMT / CV etc. model, you quickly notice many shortcomings. But sadly most don't actually try their models and overfit accuracy scores.
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True, even in industry labs sometimes.
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