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Comment by to11mtm

4 years ago

> However, to lament programmers not eking out every megabyte of payload size is nonsensical - in my opinion. Why waste a scarce resource (labour hours) optimising the use of a cheap and plentiful resource (bandwidth/storage).

I'll give a counterpoint to this example; MineSweeper on the Windows Store.

Last time I took a look, the installation size of this app was more than a 'functional' install of the entire Windows 98 OS, including a slightly-less-colorful version of the same game.

Or, for a more 'Business' example. Autocad 2013+; it became bloated, frustrating to work with, and expensive.

> Imagine a world where fusion energy was the most commonly employed energy source and the cost of electricity in both environmental and economic terms was negligible. Should we still have energy-star rated refrigerators? Why? What purpose would it serve?

In a 'happy path' fusion scenario, the best refrigerator design would be one with the lowest ozone depleting and/or greenhouse gas emitting setup, so long as the energy consumption was overall sustainable on the grid a lot of them were hooked up to.

Another example: Hacker News website vs. other websites.

It has perfect functionality but doesn't waste your time by loading bloatware for 10 seconds.

  • I have to question "perfect functionality".

    Even 25 years ago, on Slashdot I could tell it not to show comments with less than a certain number of upvotes, and thus filter out a lot of the dross from busy conversations.

    I can't do that on HN. I can do something like it on Reddit, although I know of no "expand all" functionality, but on HN it's all or nothing.

    That is imperfect to say the least.