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I love engineering. I love building things, and solving problems.
Don't miss any new articles and instead receive them in your inbox as soon as they become available.
A series of articles focusing on the common problems caused by improperly managed teams.
Learn how to detect toxic situations, deal with them, and her your team with this curated topic of articles.
Get inspired with random insights on working, strategy, and pragmatic communication.
I love engineering. I love building things, and solving problems.
When facing mockery for following good practices, or criticism, I tend to shrug it off. I learned that, to detach myself from the emotional side of being criticized and mocked for things I consider valuable in my daily life and work.
Here’s an interesting concept: boring tasks are a natural break time for our minds to cool down, and relax.
When working in a creative field, being afraid is the worse thing one can do to themselves.
There is a term of cognitive load, referring to the effort being used in the working memory: how hard it is to keep everything in mind, in other words.
I have two gripes with my generation. One, work is often seen as a mundane process of obtaining money. Two, rampant acceptance of bad company culture, and mishandling at work, because work feeds one's family.
When we're working for a while on something, it's easy to loose track of the motivation.
When creativity strikes, time matters. There's nothing worse than grinding gears, when I really want to write down an idea for a blog post, or a new feature in my projects.
Excuse me, how do I get to… is a common question I hear since I moved to a big city.
What is your attitude when approaching new challenges? Are you happy and positively anxious to take on them, or are you instantly demotivated, or scared?