"Severed Connection" by Lash Xevious

More often than not, pain can be alleviated by tending to the simple things. But more often than not, this isn't done because being simple in itself carries a recursive curse: "How could it be so easy?" and thus, small stuff gets ignored. It shouldn't be.

One of my favorite examples is whenever I see a broken (hyper)link, including on prominent websites. A single wrong character is enough to sever the connection and block someone from getting info. In the past, I've let it be and come back a few weeks later, and it was still broken. I thought, "How could it be that this wasn't fixed yet?" Perhaps it's a silent bystander effect; visitors assume someone else will report it. But it doesn't happen. As a result, on dozens of sites over the years, I've sent a quick note about those broken links — and ended up being the first to report them. Some site owners/admins of course expressed frustration at wondering why no one noticed before.

I'm sure others noticed, they just didn't do anything about it.

This is also why I continually to be ultra-appreciative when someone lets me know there's a broken link on my site, or an inworld Torley Textures kiosk is busted (Mana Janus helped script a new version which I've been using to replace the old ones ever since), or even a tip I neglected to mention in a video tutorial. These all do good.

Big ideas are easy to come up with, magnitudes more difficult to implement. I hear big ideas all the time. I don't hear "tiny ideas that matter a lot" as much.

It takes real guts… genuine courage, insight, and curiosity to point out the small stuff — what might seem obvious, but actually isn't.