My Graveyard of Abandoned Posts
Mitch Pomery (he/him)
Posted on November 7, 2019
I've started a heap of draft posts here. Some are just just post titles, others are starting to get fleshed out. Before I go and delete them to clean up my dashboard, I thought I would list them out here with mini descriptions for what it was supposed to be about.
My Journey So Far
A timeline starting when I started to get into technology and acquired my first PC (from dumpster diving). It would talk about the communities I participated in, the jobs I have had and the different skills I have developed. I think I will keep this in my dashboard and work on fleshing it out more.
101 ways to do passwords wrong
A listicle on everything to do with passwords that people (developers and users) do wrong. Number 5 will shock you!
Startups Guide On When To Use "X"
Basically a long form version of this tweet thread.
@meacod @evanderkoogh When you stop talking about needing something and start talking about the tradeoffs and benefits of using it instead of something else00:39 AM - 18 Jun 2019
"My Door Is Always Open" - getting feedback
I dislike the phrase "my door is always open". It puts it onto another person to provide feedback, when you really should be going out and seeking feedback. For other people to really feel safe providing feedback, they need to see that feedback is listened to and something happens as a result of it. Basically, if you aren't getting feedback on something, go looking for it!
The "Pipeline" Problem
This is another post i want to work more on and finish, especially after how one of my friends put it the other week. Claiming that the reason you don't have diversity in your team or organisation because there aren't enough people interested is a hand-wavy way of saying it's not your problem. What about the people you already have, how do they feel, are you providing them the opportunities to learn and grow?
This is another post I will keep around to flesh out.
Managing Expectations
At the end of last year my graphics card died. No big deal, I just took it back to the shop I bought it from to get them to fix it under warranty. What followed was 3 months of me chasing them up to find out what was happening with it. If all they had said was "we expect an update in 4 weeks", I would have been a lot happier with the service.
In the day of the T-Shaped Engineer, the resume should be dead
I think I could confidently say I have had the responsibilities of over 15 distinct job titles during my 10 years working in tech. All at only 5 companies. It doesn't map nicely onto a 2 page resume. I have to be selective about what skills I do and don't include. LinkedIn helps a little, but there really needs to be a better way to convey this information.
At some point in time, you will need to trust your engineers
I've worked for several people who don't trust anyone who works for them. At some point in time they need to trust the people they hire otherwise no work will get done.
Who is in your team and what do they do outside work?
A question I like to ask in interviews. Do the people hiring really know the people in their team and what they do out of the office? I don't need to hear something deep, just some hobbies or holidays that their teammates have had. It helps convince me that you can bring your full self to work.
Who is after your data?
A discussion about different threat actors.
Use Simple Patterns Not Complex Code
I've seen some really complicated libraries that were supposed to make development easier for other teams. Instead of that you could define simple guardrails and guidelines and let the teams work within them, trusting that they will do the right thing.
Community Building
My experiences in gaming communities, student clubs and running events. The importance of getting the right people involved at the start so you grow organically with the right values. The importance of clearing the path and letting doers do and training them to lead, instead of forcing them to.
My past projects
Things I have built myself. I really want to write this, but all the files I want for screenshots and to jog my memory are stored on my brothers machine on the other side of the country and he hasn't sent them to me yet.
Security is everybody's job
Listicle of things that everyone is able to do to improve the security of the systems they are building.
The pit of success
Making it hard for people to fail. Alternatively, making them fail into the correct place.
How to be lazy and get paid for it
This is something I've been working on for over a year. It's a piece about reducing the amount of work you have to do through automation, simplification and just stopping doing it.
Minimum Viable Engineering
Engineering standards and how they relate to MVP's.
Liquid error: internal
Simplicity is a feature
I remember reading a blog post about a timetable app and how they asked users what features they wanted. With over 50 new feature requests, adding all of them would remove the one biggest feature of the app; It's simplicity.
Build versus Deploy
I've seen teams that treat these two topics as one. There are clear boundaries between the two but if you're not careful you can accidentally merge them into one, which makes it harder to do some things.
The Cost Of Volunteering
I've volunteered at a lot of events this year and wanted to write up what it cost me to volunteer, because it definitely was not free. I need to start tracking my volunteering expenses better, but this year it has cost me at least 3 tanks of fuel and a day of parking in the city.
Posted on November 7, 2019
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