[sugar] OLPC's bizarre behaviors
Martin Langhoff
martin.langhoff at gmail.com
Thu May 22 01:38:37 EDT 2008
On Thu, May 22, 2008 at 1:53 PM, Kim Quirk <kim at laptop.org> wrote:
> Lots of things that we do don't meet any normal expectations of a
> 'company'. Most people at OLPC will tell you we are not a 'company'.
...
> I have been trying to understand it, explain it, live with it ,
> and improve it for a year now. What I think is going on is a unique
> and somewhat chaotic (perfect storm?) intersection of non-profit, open
> source, research lab cultures with the need to ship a real product.
This is excellent analysis. And I'd go a bit further than Kim actually
in saying that I don't feel particularly bad that we are a bit of a
mess.
Being a bit of a mess means that we are breaking new ground so quickly
that the ground is changing faster than the org gets used to it.
Which leads to a few observations (which overlap somewhat with what
Kim is saying)
- IME, people complaining that "we don't know what we are doing" can
be a positive indicator. The scenario outside the car is changing!
- Learning to organise and handle new situation X is only worthwhile
once we are confident that X is here to stay.
- Therefore, there will be many situations that are impossible or not
worth to be well prepared for. So "being a constant mess" is a
reasonable approach. We can handle that by saying that "strange new
situations" are common, and we have to keep an open mind and be ready
to work w the team to get new and strange things done.
- Prioritisation is important. Some things are too much of a
distraction. Letting them go to hell can be less disruptive than an
all-hands effort. This is - IME - the hardest part. When everyone is
ready to take on whatever comes, it's hard to avoid getting the team
distracted.
Which can also be stated in more blunt terms: We are doing development
of new stuff! If you want it predictable and organised, I hear EDS is
hiring - the processes and procedures manual is 800 pages :-/
All of the above is from my experience in various organisations large
and small, and govt and private. We are radically diffrerent from a
big corp, and even from established non-profits. In this space you can
expect us to be very good at a couple of very specific things, and a
complete mess about a lot of other stuff. We will have to get good at
"some of that other stuff"... in the meantime it'll be frustrating.
:-/
There's a good book about this - Waltzing with Bears by either DeMarco
or Yourdon, that says basically: if you are considering a
project that doesn't take you into uncharted territory, *can it*. It's
not worth it if it's not so new that you feel lost and helpless. It's
written for big corps that are frozen in terror ;-) but it applies to
what we are doing @ OLPC.
Uncharted territory. So everytime we spot something in the horizon
there's some fear that the earth might actually be flat.
http://imagecache2.allposters.com/images/pic/EUR/2400-0070~Sailboat-and-Waterfall-at-Earth-s-End-Posters.jpg
but I think we should keep sailing no matter what.
m
--
martin.langhoff at gmail.com
martin at laptop.org -- School Server Architect
- ask interesting questions
- don't get distracted with shiny stuff - working code first
- http://wiki.laptop.org/go/User:Martinlanghoff
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