We had planned to get some memeing done but we had an all-hands right before sprint review, then sprint retro, then there was an "optional" product sync that we kinda had to go to, and then the team social, and that was basically our whole day.
Thought we might meme a bit at lunch, but there was a lunch-and-learn and it's not like we were going to skip a free lunch.
It looks like 18.35ms is not really among the best, but there are still lots of products in that range.
I dunno if I'd say your project didn't work out... Maybe more like you succeeded but still have work to do. Do you think you'll try swapping the Bluetooth for a 2.4Ghz module or something and see if that performs better?
"Mental safety net" is a perfect way to put it. You don't have to keep constantly resurfacing the same thoughts over and over so as to not forget them.
Great contribution. Reminds me of "it's not practice that makes perfect; perfect practice makes perfect." Not exactly the same idea, but related: A good coach can elevate your progress well beyond what you can do yourself.
Or like consumptive knowledge vs. participatory knowledge or something.
I notice a huge difference between things that I consume alot of content for but don't engage with, vs. things where I actually try to apply the knowledge. Your brain makes connections in a totally different way when you try to apply the knowledge.
I watched piano tutorials for like a year before I finally saved up for a decent digital piano to play at home. I had tons of little facts and ideas rattling around my head, which were actually very helpful, but completely disorganized. Every time I learned a new piece, some of that loose knowledge would Tetris into place, and things would get a little more coherent.
But there's always this gap between my pool of ingested information and my ability to do something with it.
Surprised nobody has mentioned it yet, but... If you're trying to hold your unfinished work in your head, then it'll hound you whenever you aren't working. So get it out of your head. Write it down.
Just mind dump into a text file or email to yourself or calendar event (for Monday morning) or sticky note or whatever works for you. Get down everything you can think of that'll need your attention the next time you're working.
Then, forget about it. Now that you have it captured somewhere, you can stop thinking about it until Monday morning or whatever. If you didn't capture it, your brain won't let you stop thinking about it. But now, present you knows that past you has teed things up for future you, so there's no need to remain preoccupied.
You'll know right away if this approach is right for you. If you feel a sense of relief after getting your mind dump out, then you're onto something.
Bit of light treason.