In my life, my bedroom was told that I could define myself. When I was young, there was a bright orange wall, the posters of the teen rock band were everywhere. I thought that these decorations would define myself, but they only define who I want to or want to be. I thought that a popular nickel back poster is cool like a rock artist but I sat in the corner with other otaku friends and kept my room cool in my room until I was an otaku I learned that I changed my mind. Cool is irrelevant.
In my life, I live with many different roommates. However, it is particularly important to make unbiased decisions about the process of finding roommates and living together. I want to understand the experience and pain of other people. I need to speak with our user base to understand their needs. So I went to the University of Utah and interviewed the students. In the user story mapping, we reviewed the survey to accurately define MVP (Minimum Feasible Product). Our survey will help us identify and map the most important functions that fulfill the needs of our users. Determining our MVP excites me about the possibilities of our app and some of the features that our users encounter.
Unfortunately, when I lived in a dorm room with my roommate, nothing really prepared me. I am not saying anything like this, but I want people to know what will happen in the future to learn how to solve them. I told some other students about this issue, and they think this topic is strange. They all say that how some people dislike their roommates and how to make roommates to the best they have when they are in college. This conversation really made me think. Not everyone has roommate problems. If personal space is the biggest problem, it can fix it. Some people think that sharing a room is the best, others have insufficient personal space, others are opposite. We saw people's feelings about roommates on both sides, so please love your roommate, compensate as necessary, understand your differences, and go there to build a lifelong friendship.