Posts

The Power of Small, Concrete Change

In every organization, there’s a natural allure to big ideas. Grand visions, sweeping strategies, ambitious transformations. these ideas capture attention. They inspire. They make for great slides. But in execution-focused environments, especially those operating at scale, it’s often the smallest, most concrete changes that create the biggest impact. The Problem with “Weasel Words” and Grand Scope When reviewing proposals or strategy documents, one pattern that frequently emerges is the use of weasel words: vague, impressive-sounding phrases that give the illusion of substance without committing to anything concrete. Terms like “enhance scalability,” “improve visibility,” or “drive efficiency” sound good, but without specifics, they mask the true scope, cost, and risk of change. The same issue applies when the stated goal of a project doesn’t match its scope. For instance, a title might suggest a “just need this feature” but the body of the plan describes a multi-quarter over...

Developing Technical Depth

# The Art of Deep Technical Learning: A Journey Through System Debugging As technology professionals, we often encounter complex systems issues that require deep understanding of low-level host operations. But how do we build this knowledge? Let me share a practical approach based on real-world experiences. ## Learning Through Problem-Solving The most effective learning often happens when solving real problems. Let me illustrate this with a couple of examples from my experience. ### Case Study 1: Memory Metric Investigation While working support tickets, I encountered a ticket related to workflows that monitor on-instance metrics failing for a number of services. Here's how the learning process unfolded: 1. Started with investigating the wiki documentation for these metrics that were failing our systems validations 2. Discovered the relevance of proc meminfo in Linux systems 3. Researched the various memory metrics through Google - going down multiple rabbit holes, even so far as t...