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Thursday, November 19th, 2009
The Tragedy of the Common[']s [Fridge]By Bracken King
During my graduate career, I've read and analyzed a ton of research papers. Of all the compliments that one could give, I think the highest praise is to say that a method, experimental design, or proof is elegant. The papers that bring huge resources to bear to tackle crucially important problems are certainly well regarded, but nothing is so universally appealing as a succinctly and clearly addressed question. Programmers are particularly fond of elegant code, and Tyler and I certainly try to develop with an eye towards simplicity. It's easy to get caught up, however, in elegant implementation, and forget that what really matters is the usability of the site itself. As long as our code isn't so convoluted that it impedes our development, it doesn't matter how messy it gets as long as the front end maintains our desired accessibility. All that said, I want to talk about an example of a really simple change that I've seen implemented recently. In retrospect, it's pretty obvious, but even still, it elegantly addressed an issue around the lab.I recently heard Elinor Ostrom, one of the 2009 Nobel laureates in economics, interviewed on NPR's Planet Money podcast (incidentally, if you haven't checked it out, I'd strongly recommend subscribing to Planet Money). My dumbed down understanding of her work is demonstrating that local solutions exist to the "tragedy of the commons," the idea that economically rational actors will inevitably destroy shared limited resources in the absence of any regulatory measures. Among the common (and probably off-base) examples of this is the ubiquitous common fridge which tends towards disaster in most workplaces. Ostrom discussed this at the end of her interview, and it reminded me of a pretty elegant solution that has been working really well for keeping our floor's common fridge clean. When I joined the group, the rules of the fridge were as follows:
Tags: Simplicity
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