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tyil

@humanetech@mastodon.social @blacklight@social.platypush.tech @ArneBab@rollenspiel.social I think there is value in separated communities. If you build a tool to cater to everyone, you're going to cater to no one. Developers have different needs and desires than translators, or UX designers. There's nothing wrong with providing them different interfaces and platforms. This has been working quite well for a long time, it's only in recent times that we somehow want all of them to be treated the same, even though this creates conflict rather than community. Experienced developers and random users of the program aren't the same people, and pretending like they are will only harm both.

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smallcircles (Humane Tech Now)

@tyil @blacklight @ArneBab

Yes, agreed. I think we are where we were earlier in the discussion. If your project / product reaches its intended audience, then you are on the right path :)

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