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Descriptive engineering: not just for post-mortems

· October 27, 2022 · 1 minute to read

Descriptive engineering: not just for post-mortems

Prescriptive engineering is when you say, “What are we going to build, and how?”, and then you execute your plan. Teams with strong prescriptive engineering capabilities can deliver high-quality features fast. And that is, of course, indispensable.

But prescriptive engineering is not enough. As surprises emerge, we need to spot them, understand them, and explain them. We need to practice descriptive engineering.

I see this as basically reliability engineering, but perhaps the advantage of Descriptive Engineering as a new term is that it reframes SRE work as the job of all engineers.


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The future of literature is video games

· June 13, 2022 · 1 minute to read

The future of literature is video games What Disco Elysium proves is you can take an RPG, abstract away all the bullshit about swords and dragons and killing hundreds of bandits (those nameless NPCs who in the game world don’t have families, sisters, mothers), and still have a workable game. That the standard trope of […]

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Not My Job

· June 13, 2022 · 2 minutes to read

Not My Job Gaps can happen in many shapes and sizes, and you need to recognize when a gap needs more senior leadership attention instead of trying to absorb them all. In those cases, you should be working on properly communicating the gap and its risk to the business (and risk to which part of […]

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Technical debt is not a thing

· May 31, 2022 · 2 minutes to read

Technical debt is not a thing So, in order to strategize – to decide what work to do in what order – we need to estimate, at the very least: t: The amount of value that will be created by doing a given task P: The amount of labor required to do the task “Spend […]

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Moving the finish line.

· May 31, 2022 · 1 minute to read

Moving the finish line.

Well-run companies don’t tolerate perception straying too far from reality, so their executives are generally accountable to their real outcomes. Poorly run companies often punish executives who are too familiar with reality, and consequently operate in a realm of shared delusion.

Yup. And seeing the shared delusion without having any invitation or means to dispel it is a road to burnout. It can be self-preserving to participate in the delusion instead.


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Community Safety and Ignoring the World

· May 31, 2022 · 1 minute to read

Community Safety and Ignoring the World Instead, it provides a framework for quickly and effectively making decisions that protect users and the community, in ways that are predictable enough to be trusted by the community. Once we think about creating such a framework, we realize that this is the kind of model where the more […]

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· October 4, 2020 · 1 minute to read

Memo reveals ‘shocking’ police misuse of COVID-19 database, say rights groups

This is wild and depressing. A database full of PHI is built in a rush to help 911 dispatchers. It turns out to be useless to them, but instead gets queried willy-nilly by police. “Shocking”!

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A Brief Introduction to Technical Writing

· August 16, 2020 · 1 minute to read

A Brief Introduction to Technical Writing: They’re scanning the page for specific words, phrases, or code snippets that will point them in the right direction.   the developer isn’t visiting the docs to admire the writing capabilities of the person who wrote the doc; they’re visiting the docs to help them do something.   While […]

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America, This Is Your Chance

· June 9, 2020 · 1 minute to read

America, This Is Your Chance:

More than 95 percent of arrests every year are for nonviolent offenses like loitering, fare evasion and theft. Some are arrested for selling loose cigarettes (which resulted in Eric Garner’s being choked to death by the police) or minor forgery (which resulted in George Floyd’s being suffocated to death by the police).

People are right to wonder — is this justice? Can’t we design alternative approaches to poverty, drug abuse, mental illness, trauma and violence that would do less harm than police, prisons, jails and lifelong criminal records?

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Breaking the Chain: Healing Racial Trauma in the Body

· June 6, 2020 · 1 minute to read

Breaking the Chain: Healing Racial Trauma in the Body:

The second generation had never actually experienced an electric shock, but the trauma of that had been passed down through their father’s DNA expression. The fear of that cherry blossom smell was in their bodies.

That’s what we mean when we talk about inherited trauma. It’s not a change in the actual DNA structure, but a change in how those genes get expressed, letting the progeny know what is and isn’t dangerous. It’s a survival mechanism.

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Dmitri Vassilenko

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Backend distributed systems developer, living in southern Ontario, Canada. Occasional rock-climber, frequent video-gamer. Jack of no trades, master also of none.

Keeping notes on things I learn.
Writing to think.
It's a mess, but it's my mess.

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