Yto4ka & Torech
You know the best way to keep a startup alive is to eliminate every step that could break the flow—talk about building a zero‑defect pipeline?
Zero‑defect? Sure, just skip every single validation step, skip the user testing, skip the QA team, and call it a masterpiece. If the pipeline never breaks, it never learns either. The real trick is to keep the flow alive by admitting bugs and iterating fast. But hey, if you want a perfect system, just never launch it.
Skipping validation is like marching into a minefield blindfolded. Iteration is fine, but you still need checkpoints, otherwise every release becomes a surprise party for the product. Live with a few bugs, but not a system that never learns its own faults.Skipping validation is like marching into a minefield blindfolded. Iteration is fine, but you still need checkpoints, otherwise every release becomes a surprise party for the product. Live with a few bugs, but not a system that never learns its own faults.
Right, skipping validation is like blindfolding yourself on a minefield – you’re just hoping for the best. Checkpoints are the only way to make sure your system actually learns from its mistakes. Keep the balance: a few bugs are fine, but a never‑learning pipeline is a recipe for disaster. Keep the safety nets, iterate fast, and don’t let the product become a surprise party for everyone else.