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<div class="xar-mod-head"><span class="xar-mod-title">Project Management + Journal Editorial + Overload Journal #48 - Apr 2002</span></div>

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   <h1><strong>Title:</strong>&nbsp;Editorial</h1>
<p><strong>Author:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
<strong>Date:</strong> 26 April 2002 17:46:09 +01:00 or Fri, 26 April 2002 17:46:09 +01:00</p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Body:</strong>&nbsp;<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e20" id="d0e20"></a></h2>
</div>
<p>It was years before I started keeping notes. Even in my college
days I rarely took notes, relying on handouts and memory instead.
In my first few professional jobs I just did my day-to-day thing. I
had the one project, and I always knew what state it was in. I felt
no need of notes. I was foot-loose, fancy free, and
unencumbered.</p>
<p>I read an article in 1994 espousing the wonders of keeping a
work jotter. I tried it for a week or two, but like diary keeping
after new years day, it was a good idea that just wouldn't take
hold.</p>
<p>Then I started working with a compulsive work diarist. He'd
trained as a scientist, and consequently knew more about the ear
canal of the common cricket then your average software engineer.
Thankfully he also knew more about software engineering then your
average software engineer too. He had an array of A4 books on his
shelf, neatly labelled and dated. Every meeting, decision,
conversation, thought, was written up, in the style of the
scientific method, with a green tortoise shell fountain pen.
Consequentially his knowledge of our product, its history, and who
said what, where, and when was encyclopaedic.</p>
<p>Spurred by this inspiration I resolved to start an engineering
notebook at the start of my very next major project. Two years
later I bought myself the thickest A4 notebook available and set
out to document my journey through a major piece of software
development. I approvingly noticed that my VP of engineering
carried a notebook to keep track of the many intertwined projects
within our division. But, her notebook was A10. Size matters. My
notebook was too big. It couldn't be with me always. My entries
petered out.</p>
<p>Three years later, at the inception of my next project, I went
for a midsize, thin, A5 college notebook. Success! I have now been
a compulsive note taker for two years. And, I'm not going back to
my unenlightened self.</p>
<p>I find it serves multiple purposes for me, over different time
frames. In the short-term, day-to-day and week-to-week, I mostly
maintain to-do lists, and project status information. Interspersed
with this is some commentary, and description of problems that
arise, the possible directions to take, and the currently preferred
solution.</p>
<p>In the mid-term, month-to-month, I scan back through the pages
seeking threads of thought that went un-concluded. Or, for a
reminder of the problems that were hastily swept under the carpet
in the interests of unhindered forward progress. [The code written
in the rush of pub lunch confidence.]</p>
<p>In the long-term, year-to-year, I get some historical
perspective over how the project progressed, both of the team and
of myself. Writing my end of year appraisal is no longer the
soul-searching agony of: 'what the hell have I been doing all year,
all that time and only a few thousand lines of code to show for
it.' I now have a day-by-day, blow-by-blow record of what I was
doing.</p>
<p>Reading your own forgotten words a year later can be quite
enlightening. From how incredibly insightful you can be about the
final form of the project, to how incredibly na&iuml;ve and deluded
you were on how much effort it would actually take.</p>
<p>Professional advancement comes from considering feedback about
your performance, from your management, from your peers, and from
your own introspection. There's none as devout as the redeemed, so
I fervently recommend the maintenance of an engineering notebook.
Start yours today.</p>
</div>
<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e42" id="d0e42"></a>Apologies</h2>
</div>
<p>Apologies to Bj&ouml;rn Karlsson for two mistakes made in the
development and presentation of his Boost article published in
Overload 47. Firstly, a draft of the article was published in place
of a more polished final revision, and more noticeably the header
and byline of the article were omitted. Graciously Bj&ouml;rn has
accepted our apologies and has offered to write a follow up article
covering one of the boost libraries in more detail. I hope that
other boost library authors will follow suit in discussing their
fine work within the covers of Overload.</p>
</div>
<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e47" id="d0e47"></a>Notes</h2>
</div>
<p><a href="http://www.meadweb.com" target=
"_top">http://www.meadweb.com</a> - My brand of notebook. I suggest
green for work, and blue for your Overload articles ;-)</p>
</div>
</p>
<p><strong>Notes:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>More fields may be available via dynamicdata ..</em></p>
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