>>47
The same thing, no, no and no.
At the core i am not really concerned about bloat anyways. What i am concerned about is superfluous complexity. Of course i could be thinking about/doing different things with the time used on this but avoiding complexity usually saves time later on so in the end there's time gained actually.
What happens when noone spends time on "bloat" is quite evident today: Giant heaps of complexity that have tons of bling with no productive value while making it painful to adapt to new usecases or optimize existing ones. On top of enormous resource waste and bad debug abilities in case anything fails.