I've been thinking about this a lot lately, and while daily meetings are nice, once you start to go beyond the bounds of "yesterday I was working on ... and today I'm working toward ... could you provide a bit more help and/or context on <such and such> ..." the discussion balloons beyond a reasonable check-in limit with regard to time.
The properties of communication in remote work seem very hard to crack and I'd like to know if this problem is something your team has succeeded at – and, If so, how?
Edit: To be sure, I'm not talking about alerts/system critical stuff. Additionally, I work in a small company, so maybe there are safeguards for this kind of predicament in larger orgs.
Thanks
While for GH it (seems) easier as commit hashes are sufficiently long/unique, for others with character hashes that only span ~6 chars or so, there's bound to be instances where hashes conflict from a statistical standpoint. (iirc reading an article on a hash collision in GH a few years ago here on ycomb)
To my mind these orgs have to have a suite tools/algos requesting information from multiple services, checking whether or not a hash has been taken – and those processes have to optimize for time. (e.g. when a user makes a post, what's a reasonable time to do a lookup?)
So, what are the considerations which need to be made algorithmically to check such collisions while keeping runtime to an acceptable minimum?
Ty.
(To my mind I can't just hop in as PM at a new company as there's an entire Dev culture for those prospective employers which I should understand from the ground up.)
This post is very poorly worded and omits so many of my thoughts on DevRel/DevOps, but I've found myself recently describing to interviewers why I want to work in Dev (ground-floor dev work to get a good understanding of the dev needs of those prospective companies) as well as trying to establish why I have the capacity to be a good fit for Product Management for them in 3- to 5-years time.
At this point should I even be looking into FE jobs or should I seek out PM? What intermediary steps am I missing (certifications, job titles, etc)
The book in question is a Packt edition, published May, 2019 (Tankariya/Parmar, Second Edition)
If it's outdated what new resources should I look to? (The book originally cost about $40+, and am not keen on paying for it again if AWS docs can fill in the blanks)
Thank you in advance.