Hack #2 is the one that stands out the most to me. Too many times I've seen peers (myself included) dedicate a hefty amount of time to implementing technology into a solution just to end up realizing it wasn't going to work.
As much as we'd love to solve every single issue with a few lines of code, sometimes it just isn't the viable solution.
Software Engineer | Founder @Curiously Code - Community for Social Mobility in Tech | Positive Psychology & Personal Development @Curiously Grow | 98% Sloth 🦥 | 1% Tech Nerd 👩🏻💻 | 1% Actual Human
I feel the exact same way. Sometimes, even if I know it's possible to just talk to someone about things; once I get stuck into one avenue, I just want to pursue it :) I found myself taking more breaks to force myself to think about other solutions and weigh up pros and cons of each one. However, sometimes you don't know unless you try :)
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Hack #2 is the one that stands out the most to me. Too many times I've seen peers (myself included) dedicate a hefty amount of time to implementing technology into a solution just to end up realizing it wasn't going to work.
As much as we'd love to solve every single issue with a few lines of code, sometimes it just isn't the viable solution.
I feel the exact same way. Sometimes, even if I know it's possible to just talk to someone about things; once I get stuck into one avenue, I just want to pursue it :) I found myself taking more breaks to force myself to think about other solutions and weigh up pros and cons of each one. However, sometimes you don't know unless you try :)