← Back to context Comment by neuah 13 days ago Exactly what i thought of as well. That's what i always used to use. 4 comments neuah Reply latexr 13 days ago That’s where the concept and name come from. “Pomodo” means “tomato” in Italian, and the author of the technique had one of those. The image comes from its Wikipedia page.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique stavros 13 days ago Correction: "pomodoro" means "tomato". latexr 12 days ago Thank you for the correction. It was a typo, but it’s unfortunately too late to edit the post. 1 reply →
latexr 13 days ago That’s where the concept and name come from. “Pomodo” means “tomato” in Italian, and the author of the technique had one of those. The image comes from its Wikipedia page.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique stavros 13 days ago Correction: "pomodoro" means "tomato". latexr 12 days ago Thank you for the correction. It was a typo, but it’s unfortunately too late to edit the post. 1 reply →
stavros 13 days ago Correction: "pomodoro" means "tomato". latexr 12 days ago Thank you for the correction. It was a typo, but it’s unfortunately too late to edit the post. 1 reply →
latexr 12 days ago Thank you for the correction. It was a typo, but it’s unfortunately too late to edit the post. 1 reply →
That’s where the concept and name come from. “Pomodo” means “tomato” in Italian, and the author of the technique had one of those. The image comes from its Wikipedia page.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomodoro_Technique
Correction: "pomodoro" means "tomato".
Thank you for the correction. It was a typo, but it’s unfortunately too late to edit the post.
1 reply →