From @jakek:
"Go fast to stay authentic"http://ed.gr/pybc
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I think I have problems with this. My first thought was that speed makes it harder to be thoughtful: to consider your biases, to filter your negative knee-jerk reactions. Yes, you can make an argument this is “authentic,” but in the world of Trump tweets that feels wrong.
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I'm not sure there's any one-size-fits-all advice for writing/making things. For sure being thoughtful is important. I think it's also worth considering the merits of moving fast. Some people (me for example) need to not overthink things sometimes and just do the thing.
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I agree. But that feels like a very different argument than authenticity.
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But I think my main point is: we should move on past Move Fast And Break Things – even just by acknowledging some of the caveats of that approach alongside the pros.
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…or even linking to a post that advocates the opposite. :·)
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I disagree that it's the same sentiment as "move fast and break things". Sure, it's not the world's best or most well-crafted post, so maybe that's not clear...
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but actually this discussion we're having is interesting and wouldn't've happened if I'd tried to anticipate every counterargument—cause I wouldn't've bothered writing the post. It was either gonna be fast or not exist.
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Let’s talk about this more in person! I have a lot of strong thoughts about this. And strong thoughts like these are not good for Twitter. :·)
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I'm in!0 replies 0 retweets 2 likesThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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