Not exact matches
My son loves to build with Legos, and I like to encourage any
kind of play that involves building, creative thinking and
problem solving; but I have two major
problems with Lego sets (aside from the expense), 1) the little pieces get EVERYWHERE which is not good with a baby
around, and 2) I have to store them knowing that once my son has already built a particular set, he will not be building it again any time soon.
There are no (at least for now, with two Acts already released) actual puzzles or
problems to
solve, you just
kind of wander
around clicking on various objects or people and reading the dialogs.
I think it's that idea
of let's make sure we really have our heads
around the
problem, that we understand, and that we are empathizing with the people who need the
problem solved, we understand what's been tried and what's failed, and what may be the
problems with what those solutions were, and all that
kind of stuff.
Then I think there's
kind of this parallel track
of issues to unpack where there's a distinction between small firms that have built their business model
around being able to help
solve problems of access, whether that's
around unbundling their services or how they do their pricing, or giving away some free do it yourself content on the front end, whether that's also as part
of their lead acquisition strategy or just as a service to people who need it, is I think separate from people who then volunteer their time in pro bono efforts, or people who donate their money to legal charitable causes.
Explain that you are trying to
solve the
problem, but since she doesn't do it when you're
around, you'd like to understand what
kind of distress she's under so you can be better equipped to help her.
Company has a good playmaker with Watson, who wins at «Jeopardy» and runs
around solving all
kinds of business
problems without a moment
of rest.