I was listening to the Coaching for Leaders podcast recently, and Scott Keller shared something that stopped me mid-stride: the six-word story exercise. His example was the famous Ernest Hemingway line (though its true authorship is debated): "For sale: baby shoes. Never worn." Six words. An entire world of heartbreak, hope deferred, a nursery that stayed empty. I must have read that sentence three times, feeling the weight of everything left unsaid. And then Keller posed the challenge: What's your six-word leadership story? I sat with my notebook open. Pen ready. And... nothing. The power of constraint There's something almost unfair about this exercise. Six words feels impossibly small. I've written mission statements, vision documents, strategic plans that span pages. I've crafted carefully worded emails, given presentations with dozens of slides. Six words? But that's exactly the point. When you have six words, you can't hide behin...
Yesterday I started exploring the Github Copilot CLI. Turned out that there was more to talk about than what would be good fit for one blog post. So here is a continuation of my previous post. In case you missed, go read that post first before continuing here. Ready? Let's dive in again! Let’s explore some features Switching between models The Github Copilot CLi was using Claude Code in my previous examples. I don’t know if that is the default or that there was a specific reason that this model was used by the CLI but you can easily switch between models through the /model command. Hit enter to get a list of available models: Select a mode and hit enter: Extensibility with MCP servers Copilot CLI ships with the GitHub MCP (Model Context Protocol) server built-in, enabling repository interactions and issue searches. But you can extend it further by adding any MCP server from the registry using /mcp . Want to integrate Playwright for browser testing? Need to connect ...