As the driver tries to leave, you hear ICE say, “Get out of the car! Get out of the fucking car!”
Then you hear three shots, and the car loses control as it moves forward.
(No graphic visual imagery.)
As the driver tries to leave, you hear ICE say, “Get out of the car! Get out of the fucking car!”
Then you hear three shots, and the car loses control as it moves forward.
(No graphic visual imagery.)
Hope this makes sense. Thanks again for your insightful posts. ❤️
PS - lots of my colleagues in IT are ND. I wonder why? 🤔😂
Hope this makes sense. Thanks again for your insightful posts. ❤️
PS - lots of my colleagues in IT are ND. I wonder why? 🤔😂
Somewhere between the two is ideal for my ND thought processes - I call it "Wagile".
Helps to reduce the stress of just leaping in but remains flexible enough to change track.
Somewhere between the two is ideal for my ND thought processes - I call it "Wagile".
Helps to reduce the stress of just leaping in but remains flexible enough to change track.
Waterfall suits my brain better, clearly, but Agile is more flexible.
Waterfall suits my brain better, clearly, but Agile is more flexible.
It's like seeing the whole jigsaw picture and solving from only one corner
It's like seeing the whole jigsaw picture and solving from only one corner
This method above (epics etc) is known as "Agile development" but the "A" in RAID is for Assumptions - known knowns / known unknowns / unknown unknowns. Educated guesses basically, which help reduce my stress and risks.
This method above (epics etc) is known as "Agile development" but the "A" in RAID is for Assumptions - known knowns / known unknowns / unknown unknowns. Educated guesses basically, which help reduce my stress and risks.
First I take the big picture and break it down into sections ("epics") then sub-sections ("features") then functions ("user stories"). Being detail-focused (driven) is a distinct advantage in planning
First I take the big picture and break it down into sections ("epics") then sub-sections ("features") then functions ("user stories"). Being detail-focused (driven) is a distinct advantage in planning
FYI I hit IMDB before I watch movies or binge a series - watch trailers and read reviews (including spoilers).
Regarding top-down or bottom-up, I'm an IT consultant and project manager and also ND.
FYI I hit IMDB before I watch movies or binge a series - watch trailers and read reviews (including spoilers).
Regarding top-down or bottom-up, I'm an IT consultant and project manager and also ND.