Flintstoning means having humans do the work first. Only automate if it's worth automating.
Youâre a web coder for a bank whose promotion this month is a free toaster to everyone who deposits $10,000 to open a new account. The bank realizes that toaster manufacture and delivery is not their core competency, so they outsouce the task the lowest-bidding toaster fufillment processing agency. Your job is to write the code to get toasters to web customers. You have two options:
1) Spend painful hours attempting to reconcile the inconsistencies between the toaster pimpâs documentation and their Java-powered full-stack WSDL automated toaster delivery processing gateway until XML angle brackets gouge your eyes out.
2) Just flintstone it.
Because youâre smart enough to always, always, always be loved by the administrative assistants (itâs totally worth spending a few hours of playing âwhy canât XP see the laser printerâ) you know that Donald the junior assistant is the one giving toasters to customers who walk in off the street with briefcases full of money. You strike a deal with Donald: if heâll send out a few toasters for you, youâll drop by for dinner with your famous key lime pie and set up that wifi router thatâs been sitting in its box for the last three weeks.
You write a ten-line shell script to mail Donald with the names and addresses of new, untoastered customers and put it on a cron job to fire off every few hours. Then you put âTurn off toaster promotionâ on your calendar for the last day of the month and tell your boss youâre implemented near-real-time toaster deployment and get back to working on instrusion detection.
flintstoning: itâs the practice of substituting a little human work for functionality until thereâs enough demand for the feature that itâs worth the coder's time to implement.
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