Brian Dukes

1348 days ago

This explains why, when you want to change behavior, pushing for the what you want is less effective than removing obstacles.

Disincentives are more powerful than incentives

jessitron.com

That new incentive then competes with every other incentive. The richer the environment, the more distractions there are. Like, say the central Architecture team decrees a particular library the preferred choice for some string manipulation lots of us do.