by seawise | Syndicated
I was having a hard time in the first year of high school. I was so uninterested that some of my teachers who only knew my first year were about to have a syncope attack when they learned that I did so well in the university entrance exam to be accepted by the best medical …
Continue reading “If you think time management could be a myth, read this…”
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by seawise | Syndicated
This week we undertook medical quality testing for a client of ours. Although we were very pleased with the job we do, I had this thought – whether/how we can quantify the work we did. A general question would be “Can you quantify how good you are at anything you do?” Let’s take football. How …
Continue reading “How good are we in testing? Can we measure that?”
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by seawise | Syndicated
The medical community in which I was trained does not favor briefness. For a medical doctor, being brief might mean that the doctor does not have (know) much to say. Interestingly, the professors and patients think alike on this. In medical training, we loose our briefness due to various reasons. For instance, professors do not …
Continue reading ““Be merciless in your minimalism” while writing defect/bug reports”
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by seawise | Syndicated
My first serious meeting happened in the boat where my uncle was working as a captain. It was the early 90s when Turkey was having its tourism boom across its Mediterranean coasts. The boat (actually was a yacht) was 18 meters long with five cabinets where 10 people in total could sleep. Poor guests. They …
Continue reading “My uncle was a captain and he held very short meetings…”
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by seawise | Syndicated
I was reading the book “Lateral Thinking” by Edward de Bono the other day and becoming to understand why I was having a hard time getting along with my family and peers during my youth and early adulthood. It was the reason that I was tending to think lateral. I was not doing this to …
Continue reading ““Elementary, my dear Watson.””
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