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:a_fucking_narwhal_tusk_tho: Hey CoSo:

If you boost this 25 times..
I will donate $25 to the CounterSocial Life Support 🆘

It's that easy!

gofundme.com/f/countersocial-l

Assuming you’re working and not screwing around, if you can’t fit the work you have to do for the week into the standard amount of work time for that week, that’s a failure of planning and not that you didn’t work hard enough.

nbcnews.com/think/opinion/lyme

This is one of the best articles on the current state of Lyme disease research and treatment in America. It's a s***show.

A Chicago woman in her 60s is confirmed to have the second identified US case of the Wuhan coronavirus, the CDC says cnn.com/2020/01/24/health/wuha 

Ha! I literally just got a work email about a new "innovation challenge" we're going to be doing. 😆

Has it been a little harder to use a technology we're less familiar with, plus a way of using it that we're less familiar with? Sure. But it's really fast, it's less expensive, less complicated than I feared and so it was absolutely worth the risk. Innovation pays off, and it can be an everyday thing. 8/8

As a concrete example, in our current project we decided to use a single table DynamoDB instead of multiple tables or a SQL database. We chose to do that because we found this talk, and it blew our freaking minds.

youtube.com/watch?v=HaEPXoXVf2

7/8

On my team when you take a ticket you are in charge of deciding how to implement the feature. If you need help or advice, you can ask anyone or even get the whole team together to figure it out. But if you want to try applying some new technology to your work you can certainly give it a shot. It doesn't need to be a special occasion. 6/8

Engineers should be encouraged to keep up to date on the latest technologies. For example, my team watches re:Invent carefully because we're an AWS shop and all the fun new stuff tends to come out during the conference. Many times they've released something that scratches a specific itch we've had. 5/8

More than anything, it's a problem if you feel like you can't ever have tickets that "fail". It should be OK to have tickets where you try a thing, realize it isn't going to work as planned, and either pivot or close the ticket in favor of a new one. Life is uncertain, and that's normal. You learn nothing by only doing what you already know. 4/8

Innovation isn't a thing you only do on special occasions. As a software engineer, engineering should be one of the core activities of doing your job. It's a problem if your product owner never lets you fix technical debt. It's a problem if you don't feel like you can experiment or try new technologies or novel architectures in the course of doing your regular work. 3/8

I don't like innovation sprints. My colleagues always look at me funny when I tell them that. 2/8

Innovation sprints are a thing that software teams sometimes do. Sometimes it's just a way to let engineers work on tech debt tickets that have been sitting around for awhile and sometimes they make it more of an event like a hackathon with project teams and prizes, etc. There's nearly always a stipulation that it must be somehow "work related". 1/8

@0x56 I've already seen people on the bird site claiming it's a sign of one of the horsemen of the apocalypse having arrived. Probably joking? 🤷‍♂️

Networking Problems.

Look, The latency falls every time you clap your hands, and say you believe.

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Scion Altera

CounterSocial is the first Social Network Platform to take a zero-tolerance stance to hostile nations, bot accounts and trolls who are weaponizing OUR social media platforms and freedoms to engage in influence operations against us. And we're here to counter it.