this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2023
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I disagree on a fundamental level. You're literally saying not to learn from our past mistakes with your quote "nor should look to set up tooling with what we learnt from Reddits failures."
That's just nonsensical.
Exactly, which is why we need to look at our past and make this attempt better by not falling into the same pitfalls we did before. Then when this falls apart (everything does) we can look back at what we did here and learn from those mistakes to do it better next time. That's how progress is made, looking at the past and improving on it. Sometimes that means adaptations to old ways, sometimes that means new systems entirely. But you start by looking at where you began.