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"06-18-13 - How to Work"

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Blogger Hook said...

I ranted about this a while ago as well...

http://bookofhook.blogspot.com/2013/03/smart-guy-productivity-pitfalls.html

June 21, 2013 at 10:00 AM

Blogger SteveP said...

while I agree with most of what you said, especially the internet being a distraction and time waster, I do love working from my laptop. Being portable helps with some of the boredom and I think the smaller screen provides more focus. But hey, to each his own.

June 21, 2013 at 4:49 PM

Blogger cbloom said...

laptop one is not about productivity so much as my own belief that almost any time in a laptop position is extremely harmful to the body (kyphosis, rounded shoulders, etc).

June 21, 2013 at 5:49 PM

Blogger Tom Forsyth said...

I think this is a case of personality. I have worked the last fifteen years with high distraction quotient. It started at 3Dlabs where I was doing Developer Relations as well as driver writing, and a new driver would take twenty mouse clicks and a three-minute reboot to test, so I got really good at doing devrel email on a different machine in the meantime - for the sake of efficiency.

Ever since, I've been really good at switching contexts. While answering emails, my coding brain is sorting through permutations. English and C seem to occupy completely different parts of my brain. I find it really helpful to think about something hard for a while, then let it soak in the background while doing English-typing crap. When I later worked for Intel - which has an endless stream of eye-rolling email - I found it pretty easy to adapt to.

But it's interesting seeing the other side of the coin. I've observed many amazing programmers (you know who I mean) have entire days nuked from orbit by a few stray emails. Not only do I not have that problem - I NEED the distraction to process ideas, or I go off half-cocked and waste my own time.

There's a huge variance in people - even amongst coders. It's fascinating watching peoples' brains at work.

June 22, 2013 at 11:05 PM

Blogger cbloom said...

Yeah totally, it's very personal. I know quite a few great programmers who are severely hampered by distraction and I'd love to see them try my prescription; others are not so affected.

For me personally, it's not so much an issue of distraction as eliminating the choice of doing anything other than work. A lot of my work these days is not very fun, so if I give myself the option to go off on the internet and learn about matrix orthonormalization or whatever exciting thing I'd rather do, I'll do it.

I'm also finding recently that life works better for me if I give myself fewer choices. If I don't have decision points about "what should I be doing now" then I have more energy to put into the work decisions.

Lastly my prescription is also about my physical problems. Part of my goal is for physical purposes to spend an absolute minimum of time at the computer (particularly tired time, which is when serious harm can be done), and therefore to maximize the work done in that minimum of time.

June 24, 2013 at 8:06 AM

Blogger Jim said...

Charles, for ergonomics, have you ever tried a split keyboard? I've had one for about a year, and my tennis elbow went away. I have the two halves separated about 10 inches, and tilted outwards 15 degrees. It lets your wrists be straight, with your arms straight out from your sides if you want.

June 25, 2013 at 9:43 AM

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June 25, 2013 at 9:43 AM

Blogger cbloom said...

By "split" do you just mean a keyboard with a pivot in the middle? I have never found those too compelling. (I think the MS Natural has your hands coming in at a decent angle already)

I am interested in keyboards where the two halves are totally unconnected, so you can move them apart.

I think it would help a lot to get my arms coming straight out of my body, or even slightly externally rotated. Or probably ideally just move the position around a bit each day so it's never exactly the same.

Having the hands in from the elbows is part of what causes my scapula problems.

June 25, 2013 at 2:57 PM

Blogger Jim said...

The two halves are unconnected, except for a cord between them. Kinesis Freestyle 2. It can be attached at the center-top with a pivot, but you can take it out for complete separation. The default model has just a 9" cord, I think, but they have a longer one, around 24".

June 25, 2013 at 5:10 PM

Blogger cbloom said...

I read a review saying the action of the keys of the KF2 sucks, how do you find it? I see some other reviews warning about glitches.

There seem to be very few keyboards like that that are actually separable.

June 25, 2013 at 6:01 PM

Blogger Jim said...

I'm fine with the action on it, and haven't had glitches. I'm using it on a linux box. I like the editing shortcut keys on the left. Makes it easy to mouse with right hand and move things around without ctrl combos. There's no number keypad at the right, maybe that's an option. The weird motion comes if you're highlighting a number with the mouse, go to enter a new number with your left hand, and find yourself reaching over to the right pod for the seven thru zero. Keys aren't squishy or clicky, they're somewhere in-between.

June 26, 2013 at 10:27 AM

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