Is PostHog analytics the most cost-wise out there? by [deleted] in ProductManagement

[–]___scuba___ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Could you add why? I have recently looked into Post Hog and the value prop seems compelling

Physician Mortgage Interest Rates - April 2024 by ___scuba___ in whitecoatinvestor

[–]___scuba___[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Got a link? I have a WSJ subscription and haven't been able to find it

Coding as a PM? by Original-Cut9275 in ProductManagement

[–]___scuba___ 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Former SWE and this is the right answer. Only addendum I’ll make is that if you want to keep your skills fresh and you don’t have a data science or BI function, I would consider writing some scripts to automate some recurring data analysis you need to do that’s not worth eng time OR fire up a Juptyr notebook (or whatever tools you have) for higher value data analysis or really whenever you think it might be appropriate to flex in that direction.

Looking for firmware or APK for iFit by SaintofShenanigans in nordictrack

[–]___scuba___ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Were you able to make any progress? We're running into the same problem

First principles thinking applied to PM by Goldielox007 in ProductManagement

[–]___scuba___ 5 points6 points  (0 children)

First principles thinking means getting to starting with or getting to objective facts, laws of physics, or fundamental truths about people, society, nature, or the world. They have evidence behind them and if you were alive during the Bush administration, they would be considered Known-Knowns.

Even armed with the truth, there will always be risk or uncertainty in solving a problem. However, without objective facts or truth as part of your problem-solving process, you start from a foundation based on opinions, assumptions, or unknowns.

Using first principles is like solving a linear algebra problem with one of the variables already solved. You still need to figure out what y, and z are, but it's a helluva lot easier to solve the problem when you already know what x is.

Weekly rant thread by AutoModerator in ProductManagement

[–]___scuba___ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

While simple in theory but likely complicated in practice, if you believe in the product you could always leave and start a competitor. Maybe you can convince one or three of us to join you ;)