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[return to "Nuanced communication usually doesn't work at scale"]
1. mattma+Jp[view] [source] 2022-01-29 19:40:19
>>tagoll+(OP)
I think the problem is that people, even smart people, lack critical thinking skills or don't apply them. It's not the scale that makes the nuanced communication not work, it's the scale that makes you notice it. You could have the same communications with smaller groups and you'd have the same results, you just wouldn't be as likely to get negative feedback indicating it.

It's also ironic to me that someone would try nuanced communication on Twitter, a platform whose very design discourages it. You can't do nuanced communication in 280 characters, but you can do vitriol just fine. So they do the tweet storm which turns off anyone who isn't incredibly interested in what you're saying.

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2. mister+jE[view] [source] 2022-01-29 21:16:15
>>mattma+Jp
> I think the problem is that people, even smart people, lack critical thinking skills or don't apply them.

I agree, but I think it's more nuanced than this: smart people can regularly be observed being unable to think critically during conversations (particularly on certain topics), yet the same people can think critically writing code. Assuming this is true (it's certainly quite true), it seems to me that differences between these two contexts causes the mind to behave differently.

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3. alar44+KM[view] [source] 2022-01-29 22:10:42
>>mister+jE
The major difference is the synchronicity in communication. When you write code you can sit and ponder. When someone asks you a question in a conversation, you cant just walk away, think about it, and come back 15 minutes later. It's like speed chess vs hours per side. If you have to respond instantly, you move may be good, but you might find a better one given more time.
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4. mister+2O[view] [source] 2022-01-29 22:19:28
>>alar44+KM
Agreed, but that is possible on forums, but people often can't do it there either. There is something else going on imho.
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