I was not talking about “this elevation is higher than yours”. I mean, if you got better idea that solves my problem more efficiently, thank you very much.
I was talking about the ideas which are at the same level. You need hot chocolate, which is hot and sweet, but all you have is coffee and lemonade. You can drink coffee, it’s warm but bitter, and you can drink lemonade, which is sweet, but cold. Someone says, take lemonade, someone says take coffee. In the end, it doesn’t matter which one you take. Both solve the problem partially, but community will take none, because it’s not perfect.
Translated to the case I wanted to cover: let’s say we have part of the community which wants to improve the world we live in. Some think building better government will help, some think doing research, improving technology etc will help, some think we should start at the bottom and help the ones in the greatest need. They will fight each other, although they could give each team it’s task and do it that way.
This is my intention on the long stick. To make teams. Each member could help solving problems he feels he could solve, without spam from other teams, etc.
In the end, I just wanted to help solving our inability to organize.
Someone says, take lemonade, someone says take coffee. In the end, it doesn’t matter which one you take. Both solve the problem partially, but community will take none, because it’s not perfect.
I was confused by casebash’s reply, but your explanation of the same suggestion makes sense.
Pointing out when we are engaging in analysis paralysis and thus becoming less effective would be a good habit, I think. I’m not good at it, but I’ll see what I can do.
I was not talking about “this elevation is higher than yours”. I mean, if you got better idea that solves my problem more efficiently, thank you very much. I was talking about the ideas which are at the same level. You need hot chocolate, which is hot and sweet, but all you have is coffee and lemonade. You can drink coffee, it’s warm but bitter, and you can drink lemonade, which is sweet, but cold. Someone says, take lemonade, someone says take coffee. In the end, it doesn’t matter which one you take. Both solve the problem partially, but community will take none, because it’s not perfect. Translated to the case I wanted to cover: let’s say we have part of the community which wants to improve the world we live in. Some think building better government will help, some think doing research, improving technology etc will help, some think we should start at the bottom and help the ones in the greatest need. They will fight each other, although they could give each team it’s task and do it that way. This is my intention on the long stick. To make teams. Each member could help solving problems he feels he could solve, without spam from other teams, etc.
In the end, I just wanted to help solving our inability to organize.
I was confused by casebash’s reply, but your explanation of the same suggestion makes sense.
Pointing out when we are engaging in analysis paralysis and thus becoming less effective would be a good habit, I think. I’m not good at it, but I’ll see what I can do.