Yes, I find the position of Da692 a bit unfair too.
Da692, do you know how much time Acidpants has put in his project? No, just like me, you don't know. Yet, you seem to assume immediately that he is guilty of laziness. That's one step I wouldn't take so quickly.
Personally, I agree with Stewie: Science doesn't always reward hard work.
When you start a new project, you can't be sure if it is going to work or not. But you have to try to find out...
For young researchers, the number of publications doesn't necessarily reflect the scientific value of a person. If you start a PhD on a difficult project, chances are you will have fewer publications at the end than someone working on an easy one. Unfortunately, afterwards for finding a good postdoc and for your later academic career, the number of publications is critical. Nobody said life has to be fair.
Remark, it is for senior researchers (who have been working on many different projects, both easy and difficult, over a decade or more) that the publications number starts to be relevant to determine their scientific value: the ups and downs of their career tends to average out, more or less. Before that, the publication fluctuations are too high to be statistically meaningful.
If as a new PhD student, you want to start to publish as soon as possible:
- stay in the same lab where you did your master work and keep working on the same project.
- look for a lab where the research project is near completion and with a postdoc to closely monitor it.