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There's no shame in not finishing your hobby projects. Worrying about that is pointless.

There is still benefit in finishing projects. The Cult of Done Manifesto has a brilliant 13th entry: "Done is the engine of more".

By finishing things, you'll inspire more work, you gain momentum and you can get feedback that feeds into creating more.

I love that phrasing.

"Done is the engine of more"

hamatti.org/posts/done-is-the-

Juha-Matti Santala - Community Builder. Dreamer. Adventurer. · Done is the engine of moreIt’s easier to get more done when you have momentum.

@hamatti

I like that: "Done is the engine of more"

I've developed software for 40 years, most of it as a consultant. My internal guiding question has been "What does Done mean?"

I like working with new coders: they haven't had time to develop bad habits yet, heh. School and hobby work doesn't teach planning skills, how to think about Done.

Juhis

@tuban_muzuru the Definition of Done is such an important, undervalued and underdeveloped skill in software industry!

Great to hear you're helping new coders learn the value of it.

@hamatti

Do you use a planning tool? I use Redbooth, to keep myself sane, but I do not like most of these tools: they become a solution in search of a problem.

@tuban_muzuru Depends on the project and organization. For work stuff, Jira has often been the de facto tool.

For personal software projects, I use different lightweight kanban-style solutions (Kanban plugin with Obsidian, project boards in Notion, GitHub issues).

For non-software projects, I have random collections of notes in notebooks, note-taking tools, Slack threads and Discord discussions.

I like to keep the tools very simple so they stay out of the way.

@hamatti

I've used Jira for years. It often becomes tyrannous, the way some firms use Jira.

I started using Redbooth, it's lightweight, clean interface, well thought through.

Every five years, it seems, I have to moult, like a bird shedding its feathers. Everything changes so fast. I'm amassing a pile of notes, all the things I'm learning/relearning.

I'm the project now, heh heh

Oh - my daughter and son in law live in Turku / Åbo.

@tuban_muzuru I agree with your sentiments on Jira. It can be very powerful if used well but most often just becomes a burden on its own.

In the big picture, the biggest problems usually arise from the processes more than tools but tool's design of course affects the processes.

Linear (linear.app/) is one of the tools I've wanted to use for a long time but haven't had a chance yet. They have really good ideas and design put into it.

Turku is a lovely place to live!

linear.appLinear – A better way to build productsLinear streamlines issues, sprints, and product roadmaps. It’s the new standard for modern software development.

@hamatti @tuban_muzuru Hi both 👋🏻

I’ve found Linear is pretty nice web UI and is nicely "task focused". (This has had other side effects at work, but I won’t unpack them here)

We started using it for work about six months ago and I opened a personal account for managing coding and house projects. All good for personal and work so far. 👌🏻