Does anyone else judge the difficulty of a problem by how many tabs you close once you've solved it?
Y'know, like Sherlock Holmes' "Three pipe problem" - "This was a six tab problem" or the like.
Does anyone else judge the difficulty of a problem by how many tabs you close once you've solved it?
Y'know, like Sherlock Holmes' "Three pipe problem" - "This was a six tab problem" or the like.
@munin No, I don't.
I used to, mind.
I'd motherfucking /like/ to.
But no, I don't, BECAUSE MOTHERFUCKING CHROME DOESN'T HAVE ANY MOTHERFUCKING WAY TO MOTHERFUCKING MANAGE MOTHERFUCKING TABS. AND ITS DRIVING ME MOTHERFUCKING NUTS.
Sorry.
I feel slightly better now.
But seriously. I've got a post-it on my desk lamp, dated 15 April, reading "close tabs". That's my message to myself to try to whittle down the tab list on my Chrome/Android instance. Fat lot of good that.
@munin The upshot of which is that in pretty much any product-market, /if/ that product was /initially/ aimed at a selective and discerning class of customer, then /as that market expands/, and by definition the customer base becomes larger, and less discerning, the quality and suitability of the product for discerning uses will /inevitably/ decline.
An earlier formulation of this is "Moen's Law of Bicycles" -- Good customers make for good products.