Comment by alanfranz
6 years ago
Framing the question in a proper way is interesting. By the way, I think there's another common pattern, especially in the corporate/enterprise world: the proposed solution is ACTUALLY better and simpler than the super-complex-version that somebody is proposing; but:
- At a certain point, the original problem was forgotten. Maybe the original problem was "execute some commands on N machines". But initially, those machines were a mix of operating systems, some of which would not offer an ssh daemon. And another path was pursued. But, after a certain time, all non-ssh-offering OSes were pulled, but the pursue of a different path remained.
- Technology evolved in the months-or-years while pursuing a certain solution, and the original pursuer either didn't know that, or he would not be ready to abandon his efforts (sunk cost fallacy)
- Sometimes, just looking from outside is a good way to find a good solution.
- Sometimes, just trying to solve a problem for months or years lets the solver to properly frame the problem, and enunciating a problem in a good, concise, comprehensive way goes miles towards finding a solution.
So: sometimes people who ask things that way actually think that the solution is stupid. But they shouldn't think the people trying to solving it are stupid.
No comments yet
Contribute on Hacker News ↗