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I couldn't agree more.
We need to start a revolution in software development, called... er... Flexible! Where we shake off the shakles of Agile and Waterfall! Then watch sadly as the principles get co-opted by consultants and degrade into a soul-sucking form filling exercise.
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Andreas,
You have my sympathy here. The scrumaster should be there to help remove impediments. IMO Getting sign off on something is simple as sending those concerned an email and telling people to approve / reject. (with a reason) and pointing out that a lack of response will be treated as approval.
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PM here. Are some of us useless? No doubt, you'll find that in every labor cat. I agree with the person who said a good PM clears blocks and runs interference. But even when that's what we attempt to do, there's never certainty that the client won't flex the "it's our money" muscle and shut us down. It happens frequently. Clients don't like to be told uncomfortable truths about complexity and delay, they just WANT IT NOW!
And as far as buffering devs from the business process and clients, ther is NO one size fits all to this. Some devs (most, I'd wager) are great at requirements gathering and client interaction. But some devs are cave-dwelling trogs that frighten and confuse the client to the point that they need a buffer. I 100% guarantee you know at least one.
My point is that the PM position, like yours, requires subtlety, statesmanship, broad knowledge of the domain, and a deep knowledge of the strengths and *weaknesses* of the dev team. Yes, I know that's a word that some devs don't acknowledge.
Many of us do try to not be useless.
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I have also met one or two good PMs but lately they definitely seem few and far between especially where I work.
It is not an easy job and I admire those who do it well.
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I've worked on projects with good PMs, bad PMs, and no PMs. A good PM is worth his/her weight in gold; a bad PM is worse than no PM.
I suspect that PMs for projects are viewed by upper management the way that secretaries for middle management used to be viewed. Just as middle managers are now expected to perform all of the tasks that used to be performed by their secretaries, so developers are now expected to perform the tasks that used to be performed by PMs.
I don't agree that the cases are analogous, but then I'm not in the C-suite.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Lots of great feedback from everyone here. I do recognize that there does needto be some level of interaction between developers and the business users, and it does require a certain amount of diplomatic skill that sadly some Devs do not possess. As a consultant and contractor, I had to develop these skills for myself, as in a lot of cases I was business analyst, PM, QA, architect and sysops on top of being the developer. Literally a one-man band 😉.
I feel that upper management embraced agile (for whatever reasons) and figured that they could replace PM's with scrum masters, without recognizing that a good PM is more than just a process pusher. Perhaps it ties back to bad PM's in part, and looking for some way to improve things.
I look at all this, and wonder what will become of software development on the whole in the future. I feel that this needs to change again if we are to really improve how things are done.
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dealing with a "newer" application from the evil empire. *cough* powerBI *cough*
Stupid memory hog and a half.
Ok it does do easy pretty well. It also does pretty fairly well.
But none of that is what annoys me. Right now the biggest annoyance is the stupid interface that doesn't accept hotkeys. Close the current BI worksheet/data you would think control F4 or perhaps Ctrl-W Nope. You have to close the entire application.
Also, Alt-F-S you would think that would save. Nope Alt DOES NOT EVEN WORK!
Why the heck?
MS spent years teaching everyone to use the Alt Key and the Control key and now they take them away.
Just annoying.
But back to the closing of the current workbook. So I have to close the entire application before I can open another workbook. Or I have to have two workbooks open at the same time before I can close another one. and since this is a huge memory hog. Wellllllllll.
1 out of 5 would not recommend.
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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rnbergren wrote: But back to the closing of the current workbook.
But what are you meaning by closing the current workbook?, are you meaning the current tab in the report designer?
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nope I mean closing whatever project I am currently working on. It would be the same as closing a project in Visual Studio or closing an Excel Workbook or closing a database in Access, or a presentation in powerpoint.
You simply cannot close the current document etc... without closing the entire application and there are no hotkeys to do anything. Everything is a mouse click.
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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rnbergren wrote: You simply cannot close the current document etc... without closing the entire application
In Power BI, you are always going to work with one document (in this case the report) or the Workbook in Excel. This report can then have multiple tabs (called pages which you would call sheets in Excel).
You can not close individual pages the same way you can not close individual sheets in an Excel workbook.
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did you read my response or my question? seriously did you actually take the time to read it?
I only want to work in one project/report/document at a time. I just want to be able to close the flipping report and leave PowerBI open so I can open the next one I want to work on. That is all.
Also, I simply want ALL freaking hotkeys to actually work. Alt-F(ile)-S(ave) should work dang nabbit.
Ctrl-F4 should close it.
Please read my question before replying. I would appreciate it.Thanks
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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rnbergren wrote: I just want to be able to close the flipping report and leave PowerBI open so I can open the next one I want to work on.
Maybe yes am misinterpreting your questions but then again, in visual studio is it possible to close an open project and leave visual studio open?
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Alt F T
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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rnbergren wrote: Alt F T
Now I just learnt 1 more VS keyboard shortcut today. Probably there exists an equivalent one in Power BI.
modified 19-May-22 12:00pm.
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I am going to apologize for my rough language in an earlier post. I am sorry about that. I am very annoyed with MS right now. Even though that is not an excuse.
Sorry about that.
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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No worries, this is what makes the Lounge a great community.
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devenv.exe wrote: In Power BI, you are always going to work with one document (in this case the report) or the Workbook in Excel. This report can then have multiple tabs (which you would call sheets in Excel).
You can not close individual tabs the same way you can not close individual sheets in an Excel workbook.
But you can close the workbook in Excel and leave Excel still open.
Happiness will never come to those who fail to appreciate what they already have. -Anon
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I would bet it is still supported... 
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not that I can tell. I hit the Alt key and nothing highlights so that makes me suspicious that it isn't supported.
To err is human to really elephant it up you need a computer
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I have a licensed copy of Win10 that I run via VirtualBox VM (under my main Ubuntu OS).
Now, I'm checking to see if I can just upgrade it to Win11.
I ran the PC Health Check and got the following (questionable) results[^].
Why is the System Disk thing marked with a red [X]? It states that it needs to be 64GB or larger, but then shows that the disk is 69GB? I just expanded the disk size to be 64GB so...??
I wonder if I'll even be able to do this because Ubuntu doesn't require TPM (my system supports it) and may not boot up if I turn on TPM, right?
It's all a bit confusing.
Has anyone tried this (running win10 from VM & upgrading to win11)?
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What VM software do you use? QEMU supports TPM emulator...
Also Ubuntu should work fine with TPM on on the chip level since Bionic Beaver...
Also there is TPM emulator package for Ubuntu since then that you can use to test the effects of TPM without actually turning it on...
With all that - I do not have Windows anymore, not even in VM...
“Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.”
― Terry Pratchett, Hogfather
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Fantastic info. I will investigate further. Thanks very much.
I’ve been running the Win10 vm via oracle virtualbox.
I wonder if there is a way to reuse the virtualbox image in qemu?
Thanks again 
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There are tools to convert virtualbox images to qemu... Make some search to find one that fits...
“Real stupidity beats artificial intelligence every time.”
― Terry Pratchett, Hogfather
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Also the disk need to be converted from MBR to GPT
The most expensive tool is a cheap tool. Gareth Branwyn
JaxCoder.com
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