tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5819005.post3207148664010653626..comments2024-03-16T02:17:55.433-07:00Comments on Programming and politics: Yo ho, yo ho, a startup's life for meAnonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08698131967747444207noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5819005.post-4285808430629972252023-12-30T09:33:25.632-08:002023-12-30T09:33:25.632-08:00Hello mate nicee postHello mate nicee postTuckerhttps://tuckercoopers.wordpress.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5819005.post-48937990189001185812011-12-11T10:09:34.160-08:002011-12-11T10:09:34.160-08:00Wherever you head to later, good luck and all the ...Wherever you head to later, good luck and all the best!<br /><br />(been a reader of your blog for a while - do enjoy your articles even when I disagree :))<br /><br />Just wanted to weigh on the whole thing about "product people". I'm a "product person", or at least fancy myself as one, at a major tech corp and I'm facing the same dilemma. In the lack of absolute information, it's very easy to be swayed and convinced by my own aesthetics, even in terms of just user experience. User experience can also be subjective and everyone has an opinion on it. The more I dwell in these lands the more I feel that I should move back to the hard - the engineering. After going through a few of these "opinion sessions", I'm just always very tired and wary. I want to do the right thing for the user but it's just such a fuzzy thing. There must be a more masterful way to really decide on issues that are so important and are often arbitrarily done.<br /><br />Oh well.johncchnoreply@blogger.com