Code vs Culture Show more
I'm a designer and developer with 15+ years of professional experience and I would absolutely agree culture is more important than code.
I won't go as far to say as coding is easy, because it isn't. The effort it takes to create a platform is considerable. It's why we don't have that many options when it comes to social media.
But culture? That's HARD. Fostering an environment that's open and inclusive and limits abuse? That's so much more difficult.
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I'm a context guy, so in attempting to explain why it is so difficult, you have to look at the social context of tech, which isn't the most inviting place to begin with if you're not white, straight and a dude.
Combine this with economic inequality factors and it makes that much more difficult for non white people and women to even start building anything.
So you generally get white guys building platforms for ALL of us.
A culture that favors their perspectives.
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I would say the conversation is opening up, albeit slowly. I think we all realize how important the coding aspect is, but we are steady coming to the realization that we need to put more emphasis on culture.
It doesn't matter how fantastic a codebase is if the culture around it stays stagnant and intolerant to anyone that doesn't have the same philosophical posture of the person who created it.
It doesn't matter if we're going to keep repeating the same stupid mistakes.
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Honestly, I would say coders should not lead the effort for building community. Having a slick set of features and tools should not define the efficacy of a community that is dependent on a people who don't give a shit about these things.
Do they matter? Of course, but most people don't care about how cool a feature or tool is.
They just want it to work. They want to be safe. They don't want to be harassed.
I have yet to see any coder lead initiative takes this seriously.
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As someone that picked up programming on their own, the ability to create something from nothing is very powerful. I can understand why coders think they should lead.
But this is just myopia. If you're just building something for yourself, that's fine, but if you're building some for other people, it _must_ be a collaborative effort with people that are not like you.
And I think we've seen enough platforms built from a singular experience and perspective.
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@Are0h This part always stumps me. I grew up weird, with few "like me". If I made stuff, i had to be clear who it was for and what they wanted. This code/culture problem is everywhere, yes, but it's such hubris.
Clearly, there was a time when people expected computers to be magic and people had to push back and make the code and process more central and important. it seems that this could be the end result of that dynamic, as a historical trend. Too far now, though. Thoughts?
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@c25l_ I mean, yeah I agree. Computers have become such an integral part of our lives, they are more like tools.
I think our progress with them is dependent on more people understanding them so we can get more ideas into the pool rather than keeping this mystique around them as if it is knowledge only a few people can have.