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"als zijnde", tss
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In my experience, most "technologist"'s opinion-based questions (aka "discussions") do have a definitive, measurable, objective answer. It's just that most discussions stem from an ill-defined question.

If you can narrow down a discussion with questions like "What is your budget in implementation time, runtime, memory or disk usage and buying third-party solutions?" and things like "What is the input domain and what outputs are acceptable?" and "Which attack vectors are you considering?", you'll see that most discussions stop being discussions and start being "Oh, we haven't thought about that".

And we have close reasons for that, denoting a question as being unclear, unfocused, unreproducible.

Removing those reasons will only cause one thing: people spouting unvetted and inexperienced opinions.

In my experience, most "technologist"'s opinion-based questions (aka "discussions") do have a definitive, measurable, objective answer. It's just that most discussions stem from an ill-defined question.

If you can narrow down a discussion with questions like "What is your budget in implementation time, runtime, memory or disk usage and buying third-party solutions?" and things like "What is the input domain and what outputs are acceptable?" and "Which attack vectors are you considering?", you'll see that most discussions stop being discussions and start being "Oh, we haven't thought about that".

And we have close reasons for that, denoting a question as being unclear, unfocused, unreproducible.

Removing those reasons will only cause one thing: people spouting unvetted and inexperienced opinions.

In my experience, most "technologist"'s opinion-based questions (aka "discussions") do have a definitive, measurable, objective answer. It's just that most discussions stem from an ill-defined question.

If you can narrow down a discussion with questions like "What is your budget in implementation time, runtime, memory or disk usage and buying third-party solutions?" and things like "What is the input domain and what outputs are acceptable?" and "Which attack vectors are you considering?", you'll see that most discussions stop being discussions and start being "Oh, we haven't thought about that".

And we have close reasons for that, denoting a question as unclear, unfocused, unreproducible.

Removing those reasons will only cause one thing: people spouting unvetted and inexperienced opinions.

Source Link
CodeCaster
  • 151.3k
  • 33
  • 187
  • 311

In my experience, most "technologist"'s opinion-based questions (aka "discussions") do have a definitive, measurable, objective answer. It's just that most discussions stem from an ill-defined question.

If you can narrow down a discussion with questions like "What is your budget in implementation time, runtime, memory or disk usage and buying third-party solutions?" and things like "What is the input domain and what outputs are acceptable?" and "Which attack vectors are you considering?", you'll see that most discussions stop being discussions and start being "Oh, we haven't thought about that".

And we have close reasons for that, denoting a question as being unclear, unfocused, unreproducible.

Removing those reasons will only cause one thing: people spouting unvetted and inexperienced opinions.