Peopleware
Extreme Questions to Trigger New, Better Ideas 14 minutes read.
Jason Cohen shares helpful thought exercises to play with in your next brainstorming session. It (also) opens up a big "what if" when thinking of how to design a solution that is already proved a clear value and now needs a very different optimization factor, e.g., how can I make a system that is X10-X100 cheaper without hurting other dimensions is a significant way?
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Better/Sooner/Cheaper/More 3 minutes read.
"if you dictate time, budget, & scope then quality goes to hell & you lose control of time, budget, *&* scope. Instead, manage by managing scope." -- Kent Beck's comment on his post is an interesting one. Given that scope tends to expand over time, learning to play with it while controlling reasonable quality (to maintain and operate) and delivery time (customers waiting, other departments need to take it to market) is an important craft to improve at.
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Learning Starts With Desire 4 minutes read.
"Just as eating contrary to the inclination is injurious to the health, so study without desire spoils the memory, and it retains nothing it takes in." -- an inspirational post by Stew Fortier when we think of our learning. I see how it affects me. I also see how it affects my kids when I try to teach them something. This desire to learn different things shifts over time, so leverage it while it's there. Don't beat yourself up when the timing is off.
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