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leduyquang753today at 3:56 AM2 repliesview on HN

> Many software developers have argued that working like a pack of hyenas and shipping hundreds of commits a day without reading your code is an unsustainable way to build valuable software, but this leak suggests that maybe this isn’t true — bad code can build well-regarded products.

The product hasn't been around long enough to decide whether such an approach is "sustainable". It is currently in a hype state and needs more time for that hype to die down and the true value to show up, as well as to see whether it becomes the 9th circle of hell to keep in working order.


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jona777thantoday at 6:36 AM

I have flip-flopped more than ever in the last 365 days about prioritizing good code vs good product, in the AI age. This helps clarifies why.

I have come to the conclusion that we just do not know yet. There is a part of me that believes there is a point somewhere on the grand scale where the code quality genuinely does not matter if the outcome is reliably and deterministically achieved. (As an image, I like to think of Wall—E literally compressing garbage into a cube shape.)

This would ignore maintenance costs (time and effort inclusive.) Those matter to an established user base (people do not love change in my experience, even if it solves the problem better.)

On the other hand, maybe software is meant to be highly personal and not widely general. For instance, I have had more fun in the past two years than the entire 15 years of coding before it, simply building small custom-fitted tools for exactly what I need. I aimed to please an audience of one. I have also done this for others. Code quality has not mattered all that much, if at all. It will be interesting to see where things go.

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mergesorttoday at 4:17 AM

Hey there, author of the post here. I actually agree with this! That is in fact why I used the word maybe — my comment really was meant to be more speculative than definitive.

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