The Simplest Thing That Could Possibly Work
Contents
Meaning of “The simplest thing that could possibly work”
Short version: Choosing the simplest, fastest solution that still has a realistic chance of achieving the desired outcome—without over‑engineering or adding unnecessary steps.
Longer explanation: This phrase is often used in technical troubleshooting, product support, and knowledge‑building environments to describe a problem‑solving strategy based on:
- Speed over perfection
- A viable solution—not guesswork
- Iterative troubleshooting
- Avoiding complexity unless necessary
Example (Bose L1 Pro Line‑Level Inputs)
For example: There are three line‑level inputs on any L1 Pro system. Any of them will work, however the input sensitivity on Channel 3 is lower than on Channels 1 and 2, while still being adequate to handle a nominal +4 dBu line‑level source. The lower input sensitivity is desirable because it is less likely to clip. That's why this is **the simplest thing that could possibly work**.
How this applies to Bose systems
Your notes cover products such as:
- S1 Pro / S1 Pro+
- B1 bass module
- L1 systems
- Mixers and wireless adapters
- Compatibility notes
- Common issues and workflows
Examples in Bose‑specific troubleshooting
“The simplest thing that could possibly work” might be:
- Re‑seating a cable
- Testing with a known‑good source
- Power‑cycling an S1 Pro before re‑pairing Bluetooth
- Trying a different channel before checking routing
- Verifying gain staging
Why this approach is valuable
- Keeps troubleshooting efficient
- Avoids unnecessary complexity
- Builds consistent diagnostic habits
- Reflects field‑tech best practices
- Produces practical, user‑friendly documentation