Don't do what everyone else does if you can do something better that leads to better results. The last part matters -- otherwise you're just crapping on everyone who can go faster than you and attributing the difference to "quality" (conveniently left nebulously defined).
Put another way, how do you know what you're working with is steel, and others clay? What if your "steel" is really just clay that is slower to produce and more brittle? How do you reassure yourself that this isn't the case? The answer is, make a big deal about going slower and drink tea and stroke your beard and say "hmmmm." and lots of other things that connote wisdom but do not actually bring it to bear.
I am extremely skeptical of all this, not because I am unsympathetic but rather the contrary. We can get extremely wrapped up in our signifiers of skill and wisdom, to the point that we mistake the map for the territory. Instead of cursing the punk kids, try to learn from them and beat them at their own game.
I find this sort of thing fascinating. I think it nicely showcases how perspective matters on this sort of thing. I almost feel like the whole fast/slow dichotomy is missing the point, since you can have two polar opposite views agree. What the point it... well, I guess that's why there's hundreds of replys in this thread.
Put another way, how do you know what you're working with is steel, and others clay? What if your "steel" is really just clay that is slower to produce and more brittle? How do you reassure yourself that this isn't the case? The answer is, make a big deal about going slower and drink tea and stroke your beard and say "hmmmm." and lots of other things that connote wisdom but do not actually bring it to bear.
I am extremely skeptical of all this, not because I am unsympathetic but rather the contrary. We can get extremely wrapped up in our signifiers of skill and wisdom, to the point that we mistake the map for the territory. Instead of cursing the punk kids, try to learn from them and beat them at their own game.