Yeah, I have to say I agree with this article for the most part.<p>For example, I've spent most of my time recently as a writer, and found that it's been almost impossible to tell what works will become popular and what won't. You can throw something out in minutes and have tons of people sharing it and liking it, or spend months researching a piece and find that no one gives a toss.<p>But (somewhat sadly), I'm not sure I'd agree with the article that:<p>> being prolific doesn’t give you an excuse to get sloppy and start blurting out half formed ideas – that’s just going to piss off everyone apart from your mum. Your work still needs to be the very best you can do.<p>Because somewhat unfortunately, that's exactly what search engines and social networks kind of want now. They want quick responses to breaking news and trends, not well thought out pieces that take all the facts and views into consideration.<p>Look at YouTube for example. Many popular channels there basically cash in on whatever the latest controversy or drama is, usually within about a day of it occurring. A lot of popular games and apps are ones that literally just cash in on a recent trend, quality be kind of damned (see that Mega Man Xover 'fan game' which showed you could copy Capcom's product by spending 5 minutes in Flash or various game mods and stuff which stick Donald Trump into existing games). And when news is concerned... well, the most successful papers and sites (as far as traffic is concerned) are those that rush out stories as quickly as possible. Someone who watched yesterday's Pokemon themed Nintendo Direct would get a lot more clicks if they capitalised on the typo that said it'd released for the Switch rather than if they waited for more facts before proceeding.<p>So being prolific definitely helps more than trying to be 'original' and focusing too much on any one piece. But I'd also say the setup on a lot of modern internet sites actually goes further and kind of advantages people who can just get stuff done quickly in general, quality be damned.