by Dwayne Phillips Sometimes we are trying so hard that we fail to notice the simple and wonderful things right in front of us. Person A: I don’t see. It can’t find it. That idea, that concept, that thing that I’m trying to write. Where is it? Person B: Don’t try so hard. Person A: […]
Don’t Try So Hard
November 9th, 2020 · No Comments
Tags: General Systems Thinking · Notice · Observation · Thinking · Work · Writing
…Unless You Have a Tool
October 19th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips There are many tasks that are difficult and require fine motor control and dexterity. They are darn near impossible—unless you have a tool. A few years ago, we were building a system that had a sensor. The sensor would sense the state of an other system and relay signals to a processor. […]
Tags: Alternatives · General Systems Thinking · Systems · Tools
Fail Fast, Fail Early (at what?)
September 21st, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Fail fast, fair early is a mantra in today’s knowledge work. Sometimes, however, we are confused about what is a failure. Fail fast, fail early! (Some persons say it the other way around and mean the same thing.) The idea is simple: Try something Learn something Adjust Go back to step 1. […]
Tags: Engineering · Experiment · Failure · General Systems Thinking · Improvement · Learning · Practice
Parnas’ Principles
May 25th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips We review some fundamental concepts of programming and building things using any other technique. Now and then in conversations with well-learned and well-accomplished persons, I find that they lack in some of the basics I had the privilege to learn many years ago. It seems that we either forget these or never […]
Tags: Education · General Systems Thinking · History · Learning · Systems · Trust
Behold the Wonder of the Lip (protruding edge)
May 4th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips There are persons and things that we don’t notice much, but who keep everything working and everyone smiling. Please notice and appreciate. lip: noun, the edge of a hollow container or an opening. “drawing her finger around the lip of the cup” Behold the wonder of the lip, that protruding edge that […]
Tags: Analysis · Concepts · General Systems Thinking · Humility · Listening · Notice
Trades: We All Do Them
April 27th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Whatever method you use to accomplish your work, you are choosing it over something else. You gain something with your choice; you lose something with your choice. That is your trade. “We do DevSecOps,” said one practitioner. “We do agile,” said another. “We do what we feel like doing everyday,” said a […]
Tags: Alternatives · Choose · General Systems Thinking · Thinking
Getting There from Here
March 16th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips We are here, we want to be there. The words we use to describe these places has much to do with the journey. We have a massive project. I have to write just ten lines of Python code. It’s the same. We start at one point and want to reach another point. […]
Tags: Communication · General Systems Thinking · Word
Logarithms and Other Old but New Concepts
February 20th, 2020 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Logarithms help represent large and complex items with smaller and simpler concepts. We forget this at our peril. I used a slide rule in years gone past. It functions on logarithms. These take large numbers and represent them with small numbers. It really is a remarkable concept. The logarithm concept has been […]
Tags: Concepts · Data Science · Estimation · General Systems Thinking
Really Bad and Broken
December 2nd, 2019 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips If something is really bad, it is probably broken, not just really bad. Remedies are available. I once knew a person at work who hated vegetables. He knew, however, that he should eat some now and then because, as everyone will tell you, vegetables “are good for you.” So, one day he […]
Tags: Error · Expectations · Failure · General Systems Thinking · Systems
That Sure is a Large Number!
September 26th, 2019 · No Comments
by Dwayne Phillips Beware of those who provide large numbers. Is anyone asking, let alone answering, the next question? Many times in my endeavors I have heard persons proudly quote large numbers. “We are bringing in gazilli-tera-humongous bytes of data every day!” “We can access the data on every grain of sand on every beach […]
Tags: Analysis · General Systems Thinking · Systems