bookmark_borderFive for Friday – July 12, 2024

I’m back after an interesting walk in the woods (more on that – probably – in my angryweasel.substack.com post tomorrow). In the meantime, here are a few things I found interesting recently.

That’s all for this week – thanks for reading.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – June 28, 2024

The first half of the year comes to a close, and I have five more things to share.

  • It’s been a while since I linked to a Mike Cohn article, but his post this week asking if Agile and Scrum are dead is full of good points.
  • This article – Mental Well-being and Productivity in Tech: Survey Results isn’t particularly surprising – but it is interesting.
  • I came across Prefect this week, and it looks super-interesting. Github link is here as well if you want to dive in quickly. I feel like this is a thing that a lot of orgs need – but don’t know they need.
  • I’m hiking a chunk of the Pacific Crest Trail next week, and have found the PCT Interactive Map really helpful for seeing how much snow I’m going to run into (or avoid).
  • A friend recently gave me a cool wall project built using WLED – it’s simple, but really cool tech and a lot of fun (and I’m not even building anything – just playing with the settings).

And that’s that. Note – I’m taking next week off while I go on a walk in the woods. See you on July 12.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – June 21, 2024

Posting a little later this week – which is weird, because it’s been a week where I’ve collected sufficiently more than five links I want to share…but sometimes things just get busy. Let’s get to sharing.

That’s it – I’m off to enjoy the Seattle heat.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – June 14, 2024

I think this is just about the 250th FfF (give or take). You’d think the internet would run out of things by now, but so far, so …good?

Thanks for reading, and have a great weekend.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – June 7, 2024

We are approaching the midpoint of 2024 already. While you ponder that, here are a few things that interested me this week.

And that’s another week – thanks for reading.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – May 31, 2024

Back for another week of random things you may or may not have discovered on your own.

  • I’ve been re-reading The One Thing, by Keller and Papasan. Either it’s better the second time, or the timing is just better. You would think a book on getting things done by prioritizing and focusing would run out of steam, but it is absolutely full of wonderful nuggets.
  • For reasons I’m sure I can only blame on curiosity, I played with Penrose a bit this week. I struggle sometimes to make the visuals that will help me tell the story I want, and now – with a little bit of work, I can make just about anything. I’m not sure yet if the effort is worth the output, but I’m going to keep it around for a while.
  • Some really practical advice on something I’ve done quite a lot in my career. How To Present to an Audience Who Knows More Than You
  • I enjoyed this article on 10x Followership (from the 10x manager). A lot of great points that too many leaders forget
  • Forgot to mention last week, but I spent a chunk of time in New York City this month, and fit in this off-broadway show at the Twenty Sided Tavern and it was incredible. It was a combination of story telling, improv, audience interaction, and all the oddness of Dungeons and Dragons. Worth checking out.

Have a great weekend!

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – May 24, 2024

Finally back in the Emerald City after some time away. I have many stories to tell, but only five links to share.

See you next week.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – May 17, 2024

This week has been…a week. But here are a few things I found worth sharing.

  • I’m thoroughly enjoying the latest season of Welcome to Wrexham on Hulu. While I’m generally interested in anything soccer related, I’m fascinated by the joy and pain that comes with promotion/relegation in the English football system. And, it’s a pretty well done documentary.
  • Not sure how new this is, but I discovered that Slack is going to train AI based on data from your workspace. You can opt out which is weird, but I pick up on what they’re trying to do.
  • This article on exposed company secrets in private repos shows how easy it is to do dumb things. It reminds me of a quote that stuck with me from an underrated book called Release It! – keep in mind that the book was written several years ago.
    GitHub currently shows 288,093 commits with the title “Removed password.” Tomorrow that number will be higher.
  • I feel like someone writes this article every year – and every year I nod my head and think that more people should read articles like this. You probably don’t need microservices
  • I’ve been thinking a lot about recently about “Done is better than perfect”, and this article was a good reminder of why that quote is true.

We’ve done it again – see you all in a week.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – May 10, 2024

It’s Friday, and there’s a lot going on in the world. I am finding the latest (and current) Trump trial interesting, and there’s big news in the Swifty world this week – but I’ll keep my links this week to the tech and leadership adjacent topics I usually try and stick with (just kidding – it’s almost all AI)

  • First up is a shout out to my new favorite terminal – warp. It’s sort of perfect for me, and massively customizable. I haven’t had this much fun with a terminal since I used 4DOS in 1991.
  • If you’re like me (and the data say you are), you rarely go to stackoverflow.com now that you have ChatGPT. Stackoverflow is run by smart people – so they’re partnering with OpenAI to make sure that they have the best answers.
  • Of course, nothing to do with AI is without drama and hype,. Within a day, a bunch of folks on Stackoverflow rebelled.
  • BUT – if you’re want to rise above it all and use AI responsibly, there’s this aptly named article on How to Implement AI — Responsibly
  • Finally – every pointy-haired boss who pays for github co-pilot for their teams wants to know if it makes teams more productive. This is the only article I’ve read that has a research based bias. –Measuring GitHub Copilot’s Impact on Productivity. Of course none of those metrics are available to the pointy-haired bosses, but GitHub released a bit of the API in beta recently.

That’s all – or that’s AI – whichever works best for you. See you in a week.

bookmark_borderFive for Friday – May 3, 2024

Another week has flown by. This week, I have a mix of fun things I’ve found, plus just some random stuff I felt like telling you about.

  • I’m a long time ToDoist user. It’s the way I make sure my dumb brain doesn’t forget to do important things. I’ve tried a lot of the alternatives, but none work as well for me. On Tuesday, ToDoist showed me this message:
    5 years, 5 months, 3 weeks, 5 days after you first started your Todoist journey on Nov 3 2018, you’ve joined just 0.05% of all Todoist users to ever reach Todoist Karma Enlightenment.
    So now we can say that I’m Enlightened!
  • I bought another computer this week. I picked up a Lenovo X270 this week on ebay for about $200, and it’s remarkably beefy (i7, 16 gb ram, 512 SSD) for the price. I wanted a computer that I would feel comfortable bringing to the floor at DefCon, but fast enough to have fun and do some damage at CTF events, and it should be perfect.
  • As a long time linux (mostly Ubuntu) user, I wanted to try something different, so I loaded Fedora onto the X270, and it runs absolutely perfectly. Every device works, and it’s fast. While installing software, I came across GPU Screen Recorder – which may be the best screen recorder I’ve ever used.
  • I’m kind of not surprised with the stories in this article on how the rush to “do AI” is burning people out. I’ve seen it happen with a lot of the new things throughout my career.
  • On a much more sensible note, Ethan Mollick has an entire book of sensible advice on using AI (disclaimer – perhaps I see it as sensible because it aligns with the stories I’ve been telling about use and mis-use of AI). Definitely worth checking out – Co-Intelligence: Living and Working with AI.

And there we have it – another list of five things i thought were worth sharing this week.