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Mark Stone's avatar

Good stuff, Mike. I'm a big fan of Brooks' Law, and the explanation underpinning it can apply to both organizational change and systems complexity. Re-wording somewhat, the explanation amounts to: capacity of an organization increases incrementally with each new person added, while complexity of communication (and thus collaboration) increases arithmetically. Since productivity is a function not just of capacity but of efficiency (which is inversely proportional to complexity), you can't make an increasingly large organization more productive without changing the very structure of the organization itself, something organizations are inherently resistant to doing. What applies to collections of people largely applies to collections of systems as well (networks, computers, software components, etc.).

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Jeremy King's avatar

Good to be the king ")

King's Law comprises 40 articles and is divided into seven main chapters. Articles 1 to 7 determine the royal absolute power, and the following articles contain rules on the king's authority and guardianship, on the king's accession and anointing, on the indivisibility of the kingdoms, on princes and princesses, on the king's duty to maintain absolute monarchy, and on the succession.

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