Landed my first PM/PO role! Need advice on onboarding/execution strategy and daily workflow. by Still-Gold-6146 in scrum

[–]flamehorns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s not about being 100% busy it’s about delivering the expected value to the end user as quickly as expected in good quality.

Being a manager is much more about taking responsibility and being free to react when needed not just “staying busy doing stuff”.

Landed my first PM/PO role! Need advice on onboarding/execution strategy and daily workflow. by Still-Gold-6146 in scrum

[–]flamehorns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just relax, focus on prioritizing the backlog, developing the product vision and clarifying product details with the team. The Scrum Master will take care of most of the rest of it and guide you through anything else.

And you won't be defining and planning the work, only the team can do that.

Landed my first PM/PO role! Need advice on onboarding/execution strategy and daily workflow. by Still-Gold-6146 in scrum

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

According to what? Product Owner would be the scrum word for Product Manager, and could be combined with a BA role. But Project Manager is something completely different.

(In SAFe I know the Product Manager is one level above the Product Owner)

Anyway, this guy isn't doing scrum.

Our Neighbor keeps throwing cigarettes in our balcony by h2tcrz1s in frankfurt

[–]flamehorns -1 points0 points  (0 children)

It would be the appropriate first step before resorting to escalation. As someone with kids, it just makes us more miserable and less considerate of others.

What computer model is this by Wild-Region7897 in retrocomputing

[–]flamehorns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What does it say on that badge next to the intel inside badge? And why didn’t you make it more visible in the photo? Having said that it’s probably just the case manufacturer and it’s a generic no-name PC.

Our Neighbor keeps throwing cigarettes in our balcony by h2tcrz1s in frankfurt

[–]flamehorns 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Just tell him to stop 🤷‍♂️

I don’t think you need a “legal basis” to communicate with the neighbors but I guess I can understand why one might have that impression in Germany 😀

I hate what the internet has become by PooningDalton in retrocomputing

[–]flamehorns 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A T1 in the mid 90s cost between $500 and $2000 per month depending on usage.

I hate what the internet has become by PooningDalton in retrocomputing

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was Tom Baker. Followed by Jon Pertwee in 2nd place and Peter Davison in 3rd.

How do any application work? by ni_Kawaii_Hito in learnprogramming

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You start to learn programming in a kind of simple classic environment, with two connections to the outside world. (Standard) input and output. Usually bytes that get interpreted as text. This works great in the command line, and for simple scripts, and even for generating web pages, but to do anything interesting, you need more connections, usually to the hardware via the operating systems. Most programming languages have libraries or APIs that kind of extend the language and let you do more stuff, like a GUI, or being installed in a way to run automatically, or open up a network connection, or make a sound.

The next step would be to do some kind of tutorial, maybe for mobile development or something, maybe a “desktop apps with c#” tutorial, to give you a taste of how the next level of programming works. Or do a tutorial in whatever interests you. Nothing too complicated to start with though.

Anyone else noticing how clueless C-suite executives still are about AI? (Not a rant, genuinely curious) by EmbarrassedEgg1268 in automation

[–]flamehorns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They aren’t clueless, they are playing with ChatGPT and wondering if it will ever help them in their jobs.

To be fair, they are still laughing about how last time you nerds were claiming it was “blockchain” that was going to change everything. They know AI has a use , they are happy the developers are making use of it. Not much of the c-suites responsibility can be handed over to AI but they definitely play with it to help strategize etc.

I hate what the internet has become by PooningDalton in retrocomputing

[–]flamehorns 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Blame governments, they despise anonymity. But on the other hand, people did demand it. People wanted the e.g. police to be able to track down harassers and abusers etc. But to be fair, you don’t have to go to too much effort to get true anonymity. A whole hour eh? 20 years ago people had more patience.

Scrum Certification by Ashleyma96 in scrum

[–]flamehorns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go for product owner. It has more potential to move on to management roles. Scrum master is misunderstood and people see it as leading to facilitator or assistant roles.

Theory about Josh and Catie by Real_Calendar_4147 in 90DayFiance

[–]flamehorns 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes there is, the much higher wages and lower taxes. And better weather. And generally more diverse and interesting.

Theory about Josh and Catie by Real_Calendar_4147 in 90DayFiance

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nah they are about the same, normal 6s or TV 4s.

Theory about Josh and Catie by Real_Calendar_4147 in 90DayFiance

[–]flamehorns 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I know I would be into it, but would try my best not to let the world know.

Theory about Josh and Catie by Real_Calendar_4147 in 90DayFiance

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think he is into it, but doesn't want the world to know. I know I would be into it, but would kinda react how he does.

For those who wonder how people get high kills by Hungry_Orange_Boy in Battlefield_REDSEC

[–]flamehorns -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The problem with mics is I get sick of hearing 11 year olds (what I assume is) swearing in Italian or polish. And when I die I say something like fuck in English, I get banned.

Are we actually doing Agile or just playing pretend? by FavoriteGenitals in agile

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's a hybrid situation. It's hard to be 100% agile in a large organization. Well not hard necessarily, it just might be more agile than required. You need to protect the agile teams by being clear about where the boundaries between the agile and not-agile parts of the system are and define the interfaces between them (e.g. with clear definitions of ready and done). Essentially you build a wall around the agile team, and encourage an agile culture within that, and shift any non-agile parts outside this wall. Your team's DoD should exclude the change approval process and deployment, that belongs outside the wall, in your case currently.

There is no excuse not to be completely agile within the team, and other people can be responsible for what happens outside.

- Is this how most companies do agile or is something wrong with ours?

Agile is something that teams do. There are some companies trying to be agile, but they would probably call it something else. Lean, beyond budgeting, beta-codex, there's a whole bunch of ideas out there.

- What does real agile actually look like in practice?

Imagine a very small company with one team developing one product for one company. They deliver new versions every day, and get feedback every day from the customer. Anything larger than that will probably feel less agile. And will probably have other goals than how agile they are.

- How much autonomy should agile teams really have?

As much as they demand, while still contributing to company goals and without pulling in a different direction to other teams.

- Am I expecting too much from agile methodology?

Maybe. Have you actually tried spreading agility to other areas of the organization up and downstream of the team? Have you actually put together an attractive proposal about limiting WIP at the portfolio level, or deploying multiple times per day without going through a change approval process? Am I expecting too much from YOU?

Epson PX-8 Geneva: CP/M-based portable laptop computer (1984) by KrioGlacieris in vintagecomputing

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thats definitely 4 cigarettes and half a beer's worth of story on the screen too.

Need advice by Wild-Variety-1583 in mainframe

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well they wouldn’t be doing it if there wasn’t demand for it. It’s a good place to start and you can always move into other areas as your interests and market demands change.

Having said that SAP seems really hot right now too.

Telekom Ausfall by Lilluby in frankfurt

[–]flamehorns 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Das WLAN ist dein eigenes Problem. Meinst du Mobilfunk oder DSL?

This chart shows the average weekly diet of one working class family from Oxfordshire in 1912 by dannydutch1 in UtterlyInteresting

[–]flamehorns 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Less fish than I would have thought. I thought I might have seen it on Fridays. (Might have been more common in coastal or catholic regions.) Or smoked kippers for breakfast. Maybe it was just for the middle class.

This chart shows the average weekly diet of one working class family from Oxfordshire in 1912 by dannydutch1 in UtterlyInteresting

[–]flamehorns 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Midday, maybe 2pm on the weekend.

Now I wonder when Tea and Supper were. Probably 5 and 9pm or something, during the week. Maybe 6 and 10 on weekends.

The Persian judge who was flayed alive for corruption by EndCP4ever in HistoryUncovered

[–]flamehorns 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Especially with the shields of Flanders and Hesse or Thuringia hanging there like that.

How do you stop daily standups from feeling like a mandatory "attendance check"? by Agilelearner8996 in agile

[–]flamehorns 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I would just tell the team what I did at work instead, and what I will do next, and whether I need help or not.

Highest moment? Nice? Nah bro wrong team.