This reminds me of my windows laptop asking me for my finger print, while me using two external monitors with a docking station and the laptop shut.
This reminds me of my windows laptop asking me for my finger print, while me using two external monitors with a docking station and the laptop shut.
So TSMPFKaT? That’s catchy!
Management not admitting time estimates from dev, management not willing to understand dev estimates (to maybe find a smaller solution together) and/or dev committing to not reachable deadlines are not scrum problems.
This sounds like poor communication between dev and PO.
Scrum uncovers problems the organisation was not aware of before which is why it has such a bad reputation. „What do you mean I can’t push my feature requesting in to dev when ever I want? I thought we are agile?“
Oh I know many occasions to bring this up…
Reminds me of “If nobody knows what you are doing you’re not doing it wrong.”
I am curious. What do you carry in your pockets?
My wallet got exchanged by my watch. I grab my Smartphone only when I know I’ll need to get work done or take pictures when out and about.
Last thing are keys. But even they are narrowed down to front door, garage and bike. Sontheim other ones I only need at home.
I’d like to have that luxury as well!
Said who?
UX in open source software is mostly fine for those who built it for them selves or people in the same environment.
As soon as stuff gets built for others with other requirements empathy declines, and I don’t mean this disrespectful. Good professional UX sources are needed, indeed to fill this gap. But will they be able to convince the open source devs who often were Initiator of the projects?
That’s leisure time or casual surfing, not setting something up.
Ty, you too ;-)
This and:
I am not sure how confident people are in a) switching from Reddit to Lemmy and b) hearing from it in the news or elsewhere, wanting to join the „fastest growing community“ and have no idea about Reddit so far.
It took me (coming from Reddit) about 2h to overview the alternatives, understand the fediverse structure and its jargon, decide between several instances, find and subscribe to similar communities (not only local ones) and finally write my first comment and post.
I don’t see @[email protected] harassing anyone but asking questions I also personally find interesting. I started my life in the fediverse on this instance since a) I wanted to distribute the load new users were (still are?) generating moving away from Reddit b) the rules were good (upvote/downvote, nsfw, etc) and c) the name. I didn’t bother about checking the instance-admins preferences and only now learning about de-federation. And now I am wondering if I should ease down my enthusiasm because I might need to switch to an other instance (later than sooner).
So yes, maybe a few personal words about the instance and especially about other federated instances I would be curious to read.
Please keep up the good work though @[email protected] . I can’t imaging how much work is involved in keeping this instance alive and have great respect.
A good start for sure would be to learn to listen and understand, not listen to answer.