On Jun 10, 2013, at 3:48 AM, Tae wrote:

> I think that one cannot get the perfect solution—if it exists at all—at the 
> first time. I like more the iterative approach: first get a working 
> version—even it is crappy—collect feedback and gradually improve it. When the 
> direction should be completely wrong, well, start over; now you know how not 
> to do it and why. :)

A little off-topic, but I really like this. Not a software developer, but it 
strikes me as the best way in life, in work, in organizations, in politics, 
etc., etc. Did anyone ever get it right the first time in anything? Failure is 
always an opportunity to learn---if we choose to take it.

Thanks,
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eric Weir
Decatur, GA
[email protected]

“A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability 
and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise.” 

- Aldo Leopold







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