@DataChaz@addyosmani Hyrum's Law is an observation in software engineering that states:
"With a sufficient number of users of an API, it does not matter what you promise in the contract: all observable behaviors of your system will be depended on by somebody
@DataChaz@addyosmani Chesterton's Fence is a principle of decision-making that suggests you should not remove a rule, tradition, or structure until you understand exactly why it was put there in the first place
@DataChaz@addyosmani "Shift left" is a software development practice that moves testing, security, and quality evaluation earlier in the development lifecycle (to the left on a timeline) rather than waiting until the end
@ForgeIdeasOrg@marclou Learning might not be the only thing he must be interested in.
He works on projects that scratch an itch. Something unordered that hasn't been brought to order.
And if you've read Flow, it's hugely rewarding to bring order to your consciousness.
Makes sense why 0 -> 1 kicks
What my team which moves like startup but is a corporate taught me:
1. Read before you do
Quite often I am tempted to jump to action. Miss a lot of context as a result. Better simply get your eyes to read each line. No skimming. Just read it!
Will come back to add more
@Mrblisscontent Totally agree. Don't find fares on a sunny day when nobody needs a cab. Take a holiday and rest. But on a monsoon day when everyone is literally wanting you to take them somewhere, do overtime and make lot of money!
@lochan_twt That's me. I didn't do extreme study sessions. Still did decent!
I used to study smartly. I literally built softwares to help me study smartly - organise notes smartly, spaced repetition technique, YT educational video to PDF notes for quick revision.
I had an amazing prep
@KevinSzabo14 For those who think otherwise. The truth: an uncomfortable truth about relationships. Great read. Not trying to change your mind. Just a different line of thought.