Why We Focus on Trivial Things:
Bikeshedding is a metaphor to illustrate the strange tendency we have to spend excessive time on trivial matters, often glossing over important ones. Here's why we do it, and how to stop.
How can we stop wasting time on unimportant details? From meetings at work that drag on forever without achieving anything to weeks-long email chains that don't solve the problem at hand, we seem to spend an inordinate amount of time on the inconsequential. Then, when an important decision needs to be made, we hardly have any time to devote to it.
To answer this question, we first have to recognize why we get bogged down in the trivial. Then we must look at strategies for changing our dynamics towards generating both useful input and time to consider it.
[...] Bike-shedding happens because the simpler a topic is, the more people will have an opinion on it and thus more to say about it. When something is outside of our circle of competence, like a nuclear power plant, we don’t even try to articulate an opinion.
But when something is just about comprehensible to us, even if we don’t have anything of genuine value to add, we feel compelled to say something, lest we look stupid. What idiot doesn’t have anything to say about a bike shed? Everyone wants to show that they know about the topic at hand and have something to contribute.
With any issue, we shouldn’t be according equal importance to every opinion anyone adds. We should emphasize the inputs from those who have done the work to have an opinion. And when we decide to contribute, we should be putting our energy into the areas where we have something valuable to add that will improve the outcome of the decision.
(Score: 2) by maggotbrain on Sunday May 10 2020, @05:18PM (1 child)
Oh. weird.
At first, I was going to apologize because I use the Dark Reader plugin to avoid nasty surprises just like that.
However, I just visited the website again and it appears that it changes background color on reload. Most of the options seem pretty reasonable in terms of contrast and comfort (for me). There are a couple of shocking choices.
Seems like a take on Russian Roulette for websites and you got the bullet. My condolences.
(Score: 2) by Nuke on Monday May 11 2020, @01:22PM
You are right - I've gone back and clicking refresh several times has given mauve, orange, blue and white backgrounds! I get the joke now.