> Assuming they want mainstream traffic they should only listen to the users who represent the vision of a mainstream product.
I don't think that's the point of the article. It's the early eighties, you're running Apple, and you've just flopped with Apple III for business and the graphical Apple Lisa is going nowhere.
If you ask users who represent anybody at all you're going to wind up making PCs running MS-DOS. The OP's point is that Digg shouldn't listen to any users at all. They need a dictator. In other words, they need to listen to just one person.
I don't think that's the point of the article. It's the early eighties, you're running Apple, and you've just flopped with Apple III for business and the graphical Apple Lisa is going nowhere.
If you ask users who represent anybody at all you're going to wind up making PCs running MS-DOS. The OP's point is that Digg shouldn't listen to any users at all. They need a dictator. In other words, they need to listen to just one person.