The developers know that performance is the most important thing and are working on it. From my own experience, it’s already much better today than it was at the start.
I think I know what you mean—the site has recently become just barely usable on the simplest of its pages. But as soon as you do something that happens to poke the “JavaScript VM” the wrong way (crazy things like, idk, looking at recent postings by date, viewing a user’s recent contributions to the site, or even just opening a popular post w/ lots of comments!), it just grinds to a halt. It’s maddening.
The Lean Startup way suggest releasing a project early even when the first release has problems. I don’t think there’s a problem with LW2.0 being developed according to those principles.
The “first release” of LessWrong is, well, this site. What’s happening with LW 2.0 is actually called “introducing regressions”, and I don’t think the startup folks would endorse that. The combination of a full rewrite-from-scratch and a stringent deadline—the switchover was originally supposed to happen around this time, as far as I understand, albeit it has likely been postponed by now—is considered especially unwise.
Hopefully the LesserWrong folks can come up with something that’s genuinely usable—there are quite a few things I do like about the new site. But the challenges are just as real.
The developers know that performance is the most important thing and are working on it. From my own experience, it’s already much better today than it was at the start.
I think I know what you mean—the site has recently become just barely usable on the simplest of its pages. But as soon as you do something that happens to poke the “JavaScript VM” the wrong way (crazy things like, idk, looking at recent postings by date, viewing a user’s recent contributions to the site, or even just opening a popular post w/ lots of comments!), it just grinds to a halt. It’s maddening.
The Lean Startup way suggest releasing a project early even when the first release has problems. I don’t think there’s a problem with LW2.0 being developed according to those principles.
The “first release” of LessWrong is, well, this site. What’s happening with LW 2.0 is actually called “introducing regressions”, and I don’t think the startup folks would endorse that. The combination of a full rewrite-from-scratch and a stringent deadline—the switchover was originally supposed to happen around this time, as far as I understand, albeit it has likely been postponed by now—is considered especially unwise.
Hopefully the LesserWrong folks can come up with something that’s genuinely usable—there are quite a few things I do like about the new site. But the challenges are just as real.