If you are working with fast feedback loops, you can make things and then show people the things. If you’re working with slow feedback loops, you have nothing to show and people don’t really know what you’re doing. The former intuitively seems much better if your goal is status-seeking (which is somewhat my goal in practice, even if ideally it shouldn’t be).
If you are working with fast feedback loops, you can make things and then show people the things. If you’re working with slow feedback loops, you have nothing to show and people don’t really know what you’re doing. The former intuitively seems much better if your goal is status-seeking (which is somewhat my goal in practice, even if ideally it shouldn’t be).