I have the answer it's a graph based filesystem! Just kidding I don't really have an "answer" just your question inspired me to Google for a graph based file system.
> Machines have raised the stakes once again. A superhuman poker-playing bot called Pluribus has beaten top human professionals at six-player no-limit Texas hold’em poker, the most popular variant of the game. It is the first time that an artificial-intelligence (AI) program has beaten elite human players at a game with more than two players
IIRC it's "solved" for heads up but not really multiway like 3+ to the flop. I believe in a recent Bart Hanson Youtube he points out that mutltiway is not solved.
Does it make sense to expect 100% completion? Maybe for something new our estimates are off by X% and future ones get more accurate. But then there's unplanned tasks/work from infrastructure issues or a high priority issue from upper management, or some other group.
So then the idea is - well, "fix" the other unplanned work by adding more process to those other groups...
BUT then overall the business changes anyway.
conclusion - the point of all this is:
1 - we create an illusory sense of control so the business can feel good about it
2 - so at least we don't have to be overwhelmed by an infinite todo list and can end each day with some sense of work/life balance
Isn't this a capacity planning issue? I thought if you are 100% complete on every sprint, then you are planning incorrectly. It's not supposed to be a report card every 2 weeks but an approach to review your work to build for the long term, right?
But that steers you back towards markdown. How deeply do you not like markdown?