I think it was someone on HN who said "I wish we focused more on moving slow and fixing things" and I still think of that remark whenever something breaks or isn't quite working as intended on my computer or phone.
So quite often, I guess.
I do think "move fast and break things" has a place, but that place is mostly limited to so-called transcendental problems: situations where the status quo don't work and we need to try something outside of the established solution space. It's kind of comparable to the over-use of brainstorming; quite often brainstorming is not going to help you find the solution to a problem.
So quite often, I guess.
I do think "move fast and break things" has a place, but that place is mostly limited to so-called transcendental problems: situations where the status quo don't work and we need to try something outside of the established solution space. It's kind of comparable to the over-use of brainstorming; quite often brainstorming is not going to help you find the solution to a problem.