How to Design New Information Environments That Don���t Suck

Jorge Arango conjures Gall’s Law, the 40-year-old dictum of systems design that remains as relevant as ever:




���A complex system that works is invariably found to
have evolved from a simple system that worked. A complex
system designed from scratch never works and cannot
be patched up to make it work. You have to start over
with a working simple system.�����
��� John Gall




Every ambitious project launches amid a thicket of fears and grand hopes. The worst thing you can do is try to design for all those assumed outcomes (let alone the edge cases). Start with a sturdy but simple system and build from there as you learn. As Jorge writes, that’s the appeal (and necessity) of the MVP:




When the product is real and can be tested, it can (and should) evolve
towards something more complex. But baking complexity into the first
release is a costly mistake. (Note I didn���t say it ���can be���. It���s guaranteed.)





Jorge Arango | How to Design New Information Environments That Don���t Suck
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Published on May 01, 2017 08:07
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