Dec 29, 2019

Table Tennis Blades Composition

 Composition of some blades I'm interested in.


Blade Core Info Source
Waldner Legend Carbon n/a Kiso Hinoki Carbon Kiri Carbon Kiso Hinoki n/a Donic website
Original Carbospeed (aka Ovtcharov Carbospeed) n/a Kiso Hinoki Carbon Kiri Carbon Kiso Hinoki n/a Donic website
Donic Waldner Senso V1 n/a Limba Limba Abachi Limba Limba n/a Donic website
Donic Waldner Senso Carbon Limba Anegre Carbon Abachi Carbon Anegre Limba Donic website
Donic Persson Powerplay Koto Anti-vibration film Abachi Abachi Abachi Anti-vibration film Koto Donic website
Donic Persson AR n/a Limba Red Abachi Abachi Red Abachi Limba n/a Donic website
Yasaka Extra Offensive 7 Power
Yasaka Extra Special Walnut Limba Ayous Ayous Ayous Limba Walnut
Yasaka Ma Lin Soft Carbon
DHS Fang Bo B2X Limba Limba ALC     Ayous ALC Limba Limba
Stiga Clipper Limba Ayous Ayous   Ayous Ayous Ayous Limba
Stiga Infinity VPS n/a Limba Spruce   Ayous Spruce Limba n/a
Tibhar Stratus Powerwood n/a Limba Limba Ayous Limba Limba n/a

Oct 6, 2019

Iron Lean

 From a Lean perspective, is ironing the bottom 1/4 of your shirt a waste? (The part that gets tucked in).

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Sep 11, 2019

The MoSCoW Unprioritisation Prioritisation Technique

The most popular requirements prioritisation technique in the universe is called MoSCoW.

The acronym stands for:

M - Must have

S - Should have

C - Could have

W - Won't have

The problem with MoSCoW is that it's really not a prioritisation technique.  

It's just a priority labelling technique.  All it does is let you label the requirements.  It doesn't tell you which of the requirements ought to be labelled 'Must have' and which ones ought to be labelled 'Won't have'.

MoSCoW is no different from using colour codes on requirements such as: green for must haves, blue for should haves, yellow for could haves, and red for won't haves. 

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