Comments on: Mountain Climbing A fantastic analogy, one so very true. I will be forwarding this around my colleagues and look forward to seeing the smiles of recognition on their faces. A fantastic analogy, one so very true. I will be forwarding this around my colleagues and look forward to seeing the smiles of recognition on their faces.

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By: amir/2011/03/14/mountain-climbing/#comment-1595 amir Mon, 14 Mar 2011 21:40:45 +0000 I find being able to see the big picture a good motivator. When you are doing something in the game and it starts to feel like what you had in mind... I think that analysis paralysis can be avoided with careful planning - it's usually an indicator of "there's something I haven't taken into account yet". And if planning doesn't help completely, there's always Rubber Duck Debugging. ^_^ I find being able to see the big picture a good motivator. When you are doing something in the game and it starts to feel like what you had in mind…

I think that analysis paralysis can be avoided with careful planning – it’s usually an indicator of “there’s something I haven’t taken into account yet”. And if planning doesn’t help completely, there’s always Rubber Duck Debugging. ^_^

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By: Matt Dalby/2011/03/14/mountain-climbing/#comment-1584 Matt Dalby Mon, 14 Mar 2011 15:22:14 +0000 Great Article! Yeah I need pills for this! Its my most common issue, easier to solve at work where you can thrash out with a team and have hard deadlines. With hobby projects it's a killer for me. Great Article! Yeah I need pills for this!

Its my most common issue, easier to solve at work where you can thrash out with a team and have hard deadlines. With hobby projects it’s a killer for me.

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