Meet The Life Hackers 194
Rick Zeman writes "The New York Times Magazine has a fascinating article dissecting all of the myriad ways that people are distracted from their computers in the workplace, and 'how hi-tech devices affect our behavior.' From the article: 'Information is no longer a scarce resource - attention is. David Rose, a Cambridge, Mass.-based expert on computer interfaces, likes to point out that 20 years ago, an office worker had only two types of communication technology: a phone, which required an instant answer, and postal mail, which took days. "Now we have dozens of possibilities between those poles," Rose says. How fast are you supposed to reply to an e-mail message? Or an instant message? Computer-based interruptions fall into a sort of Heisenbergian uncertainty trap: it is difficult to know whether an e-mail message is worth interrupting your work for unless you open and read it - at which point you have, of course, interrupted yourself.' What could be done to change computing to help mitigate this multitasking?"
One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmmm. I suddenly have this mental image of me yelling, "Get off my lawn, you kids!" while waving my cane.
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2, Informative)
Just use Gaim http://gaim.sourceforge.net/ [sourceforge.net]. All of the "windows popping up" all go into one window. Also, it lets you conect to many diffrent servers (like AIM, Yahoo, MSN) at the same time in one client.
It saves a lot of time.
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:3, Informative)
Tools -> Preferences,
In Plugins, Turn on "Message Notification".
In Plugins -> "Message Notification", turn off "Set Window Manager Urgent Hint".
I believe that should do it. (I don't have my windows machine handy to check it out, but I believe that's what that setting is for. Alternately, you can turn off the notifications completely from that screen too; turn on the plugin, then turn off all the notification options.
HTH. Cheers.
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2, Informative)
---
I'm actually just a script.
Generated by SlashdotRndSig [snop.com] via GreaseMonkey [mozdev.org]
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:5, Insightful)
In the overseas case, it's often easier to understand folks via typed English so it's better than using the phone while still being more immediate than email.
In the local case, IM works well because
IM falls nicely between the telephone and email.
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm. I suddenly have this mental image of me yelling, "Get off my lawn, you kids!" while waving my cane.
My uneducated guess is that you are about 27 years old and already annoyed.
Welcome to the youth communication age, where lame, incomprehensible typed language spreads uncontrollably to pre-teens and teens via the internets.
My 14 year-old son knows what "pnwd" appears to mean but he doesn't know the history of the "word".
We cannot control the proper usage of the language, so it's going to deteri
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
Read the Declaration of Independence sometime. Could you imagine what it would be like if people in the modern age were still writing like that?
I mean, the British already think we're savages for dropping the "u" out of words like "colour."
Old fuddy-duddies everywhere are pissed that nobody uses the word "whose" correctly anymore.
So, traditions of grammar and spelling are getting stomped on at a faster pace then ever. the forces which speed our comm
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
English-speakers already have enough trouble understanding each other due to dialect differences. I hope that in 40 years when I am 84 my age-influenced babble and drooling will still be understood by the youth.
Pah! Who am I fooling, by that time, us old farts will be telling impossible tales of when we had music.
Do you speak American? [pbs.org]
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
Well-said, my emphasis below.
You miss the point. It's not "traditions" that we care it about, it's "the ability to communicate." When my students no longer have any adjectives left in their vocabularies beyond "cool" and "sucky", they are unable to say what they really think, or even to imagine that they are thinking something more complex beyond "cool" or "sucky." When they cannot parse complex sentences because words like "whom" are too
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
That's the Canadian spelling of observatory. Geez, get a little multi-cultural you neanderthal!
Re:One thing I haven't succumbed to ... (Score:2)
We finally deployed an IM for inside the firewall. It doesn't suck too badly as long as people don't abuse it. There are only one or two people who barrage me with popups, and they have the good sense to just flash peacefully on the taskbar if the window doesn't have the focus.
This reminds me of the short-lived Dilbert cartoon (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This reminds me of the short-lived Dilbert cart (Score:2)
Re:This reminds me of the short-lived Dilbert cart (Score:2)
cartoon (kär-tn')
n.
1. a.A drawing depicting a humorous situation, often accompanied by a caption.
b. A drawing representing current public figures or issues symbolically and often satirically: a political cartoon.
[...]
4. A comic strip.
which interrupts the most? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:which interrupts the most? (Score:5, Funny)
There's also an ex-colleague's tactic of not bathing. Visitors really fall off when you reek. Unfortunately he took it too far and let the miasma stray outside the boundaries of his cubicle. We had a mini-revolt and got our manager to transfer him elsewhere.
Re:which interrupts the most? (Score:2)
Yes, Dorothy, they
She came back to work the next day... appropriately washed.
C//
Re:which interrupts the most? (Score:2)
Words to live by (Score:3, Interesting)
Henry Ford was always dropping into the offices of his company's executives. When asked why he didn't have them come to him, he replied, 'Well, I'll tell you. I've found that I can leave the other fellow's office a lot quicker than I can get him to leave mine.
what?... (Score:5, Funny)
How To Find Middle Ground? (Score:5, Interesting)
What was done is that the normal distractions, which for this company was e-mail and instant messaging, were either banned outright, or controlled. In the case of e-mail, it was queued up and held, then released on the half-hour. So that was 2 interruptions from e-mail per hour, at most. The net result was actually a good thing, people actually got up and interacted with each other and kept it on-topic since everyone could hear the conversation. The caveat, of course, was if there was an immediate need. This was handled through the normal ticketing system, which was heavily monitored anyway. Obviously, executives were immune to these measures. They were permitted to be as distracted and distractive as they always have been.
Instant messaging was disallowed, except for IRC, which their IT department monitored. Each group had a channel, and since it's open source, private messaging was disabled. At first, there was much noise about all of this. But people adapted, and, according to the HR team, productivity clearly went up.
The problem is, this doesn't work for everyone. It doesn't work for all groups either.
A little creativity is still necessary.
This company claimed 16 hours a week was spent rifling through e-mail, and 8 hours a week using instant messaging. That left roughly 16 hours a week for these "worst offenders" of actual work. Not nearly an "Office Space" situation, but pretty bad nonetheless.
Re:How To Find Middle Ground? (Score:2)
I think the solution can be simpler than that -- just configure the email software not to automatically check for new messages. Instead, it should only check for new messages when the user manually clicks the 'check for new email' button.
That way it's the employee who decides when he is ready to take a break and look at his new email. Voila, no interruptions!
Re:How To Find Middle Ground? (Score:2)
You misspelled destructive.
Filtering emails (Score:2)
The little semi-opaque window that appears in the corner with a mini-blurb as to who just sent you an email and why you should care is quite useful, as are the search folders (from whom did MS rip off those ideas?)
Personally, I don't interrupt my day to deal with e
Re:Filtering emails (Score:2)
As for flagging messages for follow-up, I prefer to use the "flagged" property of a message which every IMAP client seems to honor. Mail.app, Thunderbird, etc., let me set up my own virtual folder which can show me all the messages I've flagged (ever, today, in the last week). Opera M2 and Gmail let you set up mul
Re:Filtering emails (Score:2)
Re:Filtering emails (Score:3, Informative)
I suspect there's some obscure
My fear (Score:5, Interesting)
The reason I fear it is because as it is I already get too many communications a day. Technology isn't helping us lead less stressful worklives, its just increasing the pace of business and increasing efficiency....which means you end up doing more work and much more gets done...all to stay ahead of the competition of course. If anything I yearn for old times before all this when everything was sent via post. At least you had a chance to breath rather than being reamed out because you did not check your email 2 minutes ago and JUST found out about the extremely urget request to email something somewhere.
Re:My fear (Score:2)
Everyone wants to maximize profits and nothing else. Oh, how foolish and optimistic we were in the 50s. It's almost comic
Re:My fear (Score:2)
When 'we' is the entire world, perhaps we have. I'm not sure of the numbers either way, but I'd venture a guess that as a whole, there are more person-hours spent exploring other interests, spent in 'free time', spent 'with the family' than ever before. The catch? The people in totalitarian regiemes are getting some, and the western white collars have to work har
Re:My fear (Score:2)
well here's one way to start... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, for starters, we could stop reading slashdot at work.
Yeaahhhh, I just read slashdot, but it looks like I'm working. I do that for probably another hour after lunch too. I'd say in a given week I probably only do about fifteen minutes of real, actual, work.
Re:well here's one way to start... (Score:4, Funny)
people research this stuff? (Score:2, Troll)
People at work are so ready to be interrupted beca
you still have to manage your own time (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the most valuable one-day seminars I attended talked about some of these things. Basically (and though I didn't always adhere), the gist is no matter what the potential interruptions, you map your day and set your own schedule. If something is important enough for immediate interruption you will discover that soon enough.
Some of the highlights included:
As for determining whether to immediately respond to e-mail or phone calls, these today pretty much provide the interface to allow you to at least filter at the "arrival" moment, e.g., an e-mail client that enunciates the "sender" and the subject, or caller-id on the phone indicates if it's someone you NEED to answer.
You haven't met some of the windbags, then (Score:2)
1. Sometimes something pops up that's important, or at least project-related.
2. Sometimes management pops up.
3. I swear some people are such windbags, you could put whistles on them and call them a bagpipe. They tend to not be deterred by subtle hints like a briefcase on the chair (they can talk while standing anyway) or even a "Not now, please, I'm really really busy. We have an integration test today and I have to finish this." One particular co-wo
Re:you still have to manage your own time (Score:2)
Treat email as low priority (Score:5, Insightful)
it is difficult to know whether an e-mail message is worth interrupting your work for unless you open and read it - at which point you have, of course, interrupted yourself.' What could be done to change computing to help mitigate this multitasking?"
At work, I've taken the approach of turning off all notifications that I have new mail. That way I avoid the problem above - I don't know there's anything to interrupt me, so no interruption occurs. Higher priority is given to (work-related) IM and higher priority is given to a phone call. Note that 'higher' doesn't automatically guarantee I'll drop what I'm doing to answer, but you have the second-best chance of getting my attention. The very best method? Be at my desk and speak to me. That's not practical for all situations of course, working from home springs to mind as do remote offices etc., but for my normal work-day that's a fine approach.
My following the order above has resulted in me getting time to concentrate and think a lot more, and and I'm working better for it I feel.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Treat email as low priority (Score:2)
If somebody has a problem, they can write me an email. I still won't read it right away, but it will get a response. In their email they will have had an opportunity to spell out their problem clearly, so in my response they'll get an actual answer. Typically when people leave a voicemail they just ask you to get back to them so they can explain their problem. I w
Bayes filter, Procmail tools (Score:5, Interesting)
Procmail could be used to send a text message to your phone when someone from your whitelist sends you a message (people from your department, the president of your company, your broker, your brother/dad, but not Jim the annoying guy down the hall who's in your department) so, even away from your desk, you could respond quickly. Else, just stay away from your inbox till 4:00pm or so...
Procmail or SIEVE could be extensively useful if the time spent programming them could be found
Post links to helpful resources in reply here.
Re:Bayes filter, Procmail tools (Score:2)
If it's urgent, call me. I don't see the problem here?
urgent is relative&ambiguous, train your boss, (Score:3, Insightful)
Expectations do vary locally and between people, within organizations or groups, etc. How does one's boss, or anybody, know how often another checks email? It's when they reply. If you communicate with someone via email often enough, you can develop a sense as to when you might hear ba
Filters (Score:2)
With the filters in place, I can decide on priorities. Work mail goes before personal mail, etc.
Miracles of tabbed browsing (Score:4, Interesting)
And if I really need to concentrate I pull the power plug on the broadband modem or take a non-WiFi laptop out on the deck.
Manage your environment (Score:5, Insightful)
If you are working on something that requires your focused attention then turn off the distractions. When I'm coding at work I turn down the phone ringer and hit the send calls button so that everything goes to voice mail. I also close my email program so I'm not bothered by email notices or tempted to check email.
Re:Manage your environment (Score:2)
The problem with a cell phone or e-mail or a regular phone is that when people expect you to answer/respond, they give you grief if you don't.
I've got the Sunday comics (from a week or two ago) sitting on my desk because it has a funny strip called "Pearls Before Swine"
Pig:Gee Rat, you've got 424 unplayed messages on your cellphone.
Rat:Yes. I know.
Pig: How come?
Rat: Because people are stupid and i hate them. You see, my rotund friend, I have discovered that the key to happiness is to
Re:Manage your environment (Score:2)
I'm reminded of the people that say they hate cell phones because they can be reached anywhere as if there's nothing they can do about it (hint: don't answer it or turn it off).
Many people like to complain that they are "so busy" (probably helps with their image to keep their jobs), but people that complain about it are low-level employees trying to look "important". It's all a political and show game for posers wanting to get ahead in marketingworld.
People whose work *is* important don't give a shit
The problem with cell phones ... (Score:2)
Re:The problem with cell phones ... (Score:2)
What can be done (Score:2)
What could be done to change computing to help mitigate this multitasking?
We should write some software to solve this problem.
In case you can't tell, I'm being sarcastic.
Factual errors? (Score:5, Informative)
Rise Above It (Score:4, Interesting)
Metabracketing is now old hat. I first came accross it in G. Bateson's book Steps to an Ecology of the Mind [amazon.com]. I've taken the idea to be one of understanding the presuppositions of any proposition and to understand the context any proposition is set in.
In terms of 'Information is no longer a scarce resource - attention is." I don't see a problem. The article seems to impy that a surfiet of information is a deluge overwhelming workers, but, in any given work situation a worker can be defined as someone, hopefully, fully conversant with the task at hand. If a worker is fully conversant with the task then it's likely that, prior to the information age, a worker was equally deluged with information it terms of our capacity to hold and operate on any given body of information.
The value of a worker is h/er/is abililty to cull the immediatley pertainent information. Culling information implies a vertical, as well as a horizontal perspective and the ability to oversee the job in terms like a metabracketing process. Goes to one of my favourite quotes: "Concentration without elimination." T.S. Eliot one of the 4 Quartets.
Crying about information overload is just an excuse for inability.
Perfect Outsourcing Opportunity... (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously though, bring back the secretary. With high speed internet, VPNs, and so forth, the Remote (Outsourced) Secretary could be an intermediate solution to the attention defecit problem.
Re:Perfect Outsourcing Opportunity... (Score:2, Interesting)
It's happening. Heard it on some public radio show within the last six months, but I can't find it right now. The story was a direct report from a freelancer (writer, I think) who arranged for someone in India to screen phone calls and email. On the whole it seemed to work very well. The secretary was even able to compose replies to some of the email, and ra
Don't check email so often (Score:5, Informative)
Although email has replaced the phone in a lot for a lot of our office communication, I think as long as you actually have a phone, it should be the instrument for anything that is crisis level or needs your immediate attention.
You need to train people that need to get in touch with you that they're NOT going to get immediate attention via email. Set your email to check once an hour and let people know that.
Re:Don't check email so often (Score:2)
And those of us who work in a MS environment have Outlook, which continually checks email. Although, yes, you can turn off the pop-up when you get mail.
Heisenkitty (Score:5, Funny)
What makes this even more frustrating is that, to follow the analogy, somebody has already peeked into the box but just decides to label it 'cat'.
Re:Heisenkitty (Score:3, Funny)
How right you are [penny-arcade.com]. My bad.
Re:Heisenkitty (Score:2)
Treat e-mail as an inbox for tasks (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the lessons I learned in dealing with many people and many emails at once, is that you have to treat e-mail a little like an old-fashioned "in"-box. You look at it only after you finish the task you are currently working on. Your inbox requires processing (not just reading): set aside time for this task. It can be twice a day, 5 times a day, or whenever you feel like it; the right moment depends a great deal on the nature of your work. Just as long as you remember that reading email is a task in its own right, and should not be done alongside anything else.
Another good rule to keep is that you have to process the entire inbox, once you get started on it. That's right, it should be empty after you have processed it. If you keep older read items alongside new messages, at some point you'll probably just give up and cry "I get way too much email". Simply process them one by one, each will require one of the following:
1) A short action, say, under 2 minutes. Take this action right away (quick and easy replies, noting appointments in your calendar, things like that).
2) A longer action... anything over 2 minutes or anything that requires a lot of thought. Stick these emails in an "action" folder and get to them later (when you are back into "action" mode).
3) No action. The email can be deleted or archived if it has info you'll need later.
A simple and nicely mindless process... 30 minutes will probably get you through 100 emails, and you will have a good idea about the priority of each of the ones in your action folder.
This is simply about being organised and not allowing interruptions. The hardest thing might be to not read your email while doing other things. Just shut down your email client so you cannot see incoming new mails. If there is something really important, people will call you if you don't respond within 30 minutes, believe me.
Speaking of interruptions... if the nature of your work is such that interruptions can really mess you up (coding springs to mind), turn off e-mail and IM. If you are blessed with a good office phone system, you may also be able to turn your phone off and redirect it to voicemail.
I got this way of dealing with communication tools from the book Getting Things Done [amazon.com]; a great book on time management in general. The tips in this book have helped me getting from a state of feeling swamped in work, to feeling relaxed about taking a 2-hour lunch to let some material sink in, or just ignoring emails, things like that. (Yes I am still doing the same amount of work).
Re:Treat e-mail as an inbox for tasks (Score:2)
So my inbox always has less than a dozen unread important messages after I've finished reading. Work
Formal Logic (Score:2)
No, it is not difficult at all: e-mail message is never worth interrupting your work. The reasoning is simple: mail transport is unreliable by protocol definition. Your "worthy" email message could gladly not come in at all. What level of up to moment importance can be assigned to it if it comes two hours later, or never?
Re:Formal Logic (Score:2)
This "formal logic" probably does not do much to convince bosses or your mother for whom there has never been a day on the Internet when email failed to arrive instantaneously, "like it should".
Work Through It! (10+2)*5 (Score:5, Interesting)
Work for 10 minutes. Break for 2. Do something else for 10. Repeat, killing items on your list. Supposedly you can do quite a bit of "next actions" in an hour this way. DON'T SKIP BREAKS!
Have different email adresses.... (Score:5, Informative)
So I set up a different system and signed up a 2 new account elsewhere - a business name and a personal name.
Anything on the internet that I have to signup for goes in the name of my old yahoo account. This goes for forums, subscriptions, mailing lists, etcetera. Any online acquaintances get my old yahoo account until they earn my trust. Any new credit cards/banks/companies where I conduct personal transactions (say like ebay or on ebay), I do the same - 99% of their mail is junk.
On my business address, only my colleagues/boss/clients get this address. On my personal address, only my personal friends and my family will have it and services that have earned my trust.
In case of emergencies, my family has my cell phone number and work number. Same thing at work only with my boss.
I rarely get interrupted. I very rarely get useful emails in the old yahoo address which I check about every 2 weeks in under 10 minutes. I rarely have to mix personal with business or the other way around. Of coures, I don't use other services like IM during work, I don't have to (not that other people couldn't/shouldn't.)
With any communication medium, it's a cost/benefit analysis and not just talking dollars here, but on concentration, attention, whatever you value that the medium takes a little of before it gives you a return somehow. With this philosophy, I decide that many of the new communication tools aren't worth my personal hassle. (Yes, I also have discovered that I should somehow free myself of my slashdot addiction long ago
I hate to praise MS for much of anything... (Score:2)
No registration link??! Here's one. (Score:2)
Thunderbird feature request (Score:2, Informative)
Email filters, at time of writing, have no say over whether you get a notification for the email in question. A large proportion of my work email is minutes from other projects' meetings, people saying they'll be in late or are going home sick,
Re:Thunderbird feature request (Score:2)
Multitasking may lower your IQ, according to study (Score:4, Informative)
= 9J =
ratpoison (Score:3, Informative)
My solution (Score:5, Funny)
This coworker would always ask me why I wasn't logged into AIM, and instruct me to log in. I would always leave AIM off, unless I was asked to turn it on. Many coworkers wondered why this was the case.
The answer was simple. This coworker would task me with meaningless, useless junk that would get in the way of my actual work. If it wasn't important enough to walk by my cubicle, call, or email about (especially since email left a paper trail, and people could hear him talking at my cube or phone), then it certainly wasn't important enough for me to do. With AIM turned off, I had a low pass filter on just how pointless the tasking I was willing to take on was.
Sometimes, I'd turn this policy. After all, having an instant message log certainly can be a useful thing... but that's a story for another day.
Email is never urgent (Score:3, Insightful)
Therefore I do what I've always done: Check my email when I damn well feel like it. Turn off the message notifier, turn off the ability for an email to reach your phone or page you or anything of that sort. You'll check your email when you get around to it and not before then.
Really, if you don't want to be interrupted, make yourself less available.
This behavior trains those around you to not treat email as a good mechanism for urgent communications as well. After a few times of people coming to you because you haven't responded to the email they sent 10 minutes before, they'll stop sending you emails that require your immediate attention. They'll call you on the phone instead. In fact, they'll gradually stop attempting to email anybody for anything truly urgent. Eventually. It takes time for some people to get in the habit of this.
If you really want to get your attention span back, then stop using email notifier programs, but also stop using IM software. Of any kind. IM is about the most intrusive thing that can exist, since it jumps to the foreground and harshly interrupts your work at the whim of anybody else in the world, more or less. If somebody really wants your attention, they can pick up the phone and dial 10 digits instead. It's faster, and for anybody out of college, the slightly extra price (in some cases) shouldn't really be a factor. If they're not willing to spend their "minutes" or whatever to call me, well, then it's not urgent enough to interrupt me.
Re:Email is never urgent (Score:2)
[soapbox]
I'm developing an interesting application that will help mitigate the interruption affect by changing the way your int
don't read eMail for the first hour (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:don't read eMail for the first hour (Score:2)
New application for Bayesian filtering? (Score:2)
I'd be very surprised if someone hadn't done something similar already; or at least pointed out why it wouldn't work.
The Blackberry Effect... (Score:2)
that it lets you route all the different interruption channels into a
single device, which you have with you all the time and can view them
all at a glance and decide what you want to deal with. Plus you get
to configure which things you want to alert on (incoming calls, emails,
IM messages), and what not to bother you about until you dig into the
device and check for yourself.
It's paradoxical, but the effect of this is actually freeing. It puts
It's very simple.... (Score:3, Insightful)
There aren't a myriad of new forms. There's:
You could add cell-phone and maybe pager into the list but that's still just a phone, albeit one that is more likely to reach you. The solutions are still the same:
E-mail. Just like snail-mail. Answer at regular times. I enjoy getting home and opening the mail... it helps that I've done the legwork to eliminate most junkmail. Most mail is meaningful and it happens once a day. Same with e-mail, except more often. Open and read every hour, two, or four depending on what works for you. Answer the ones you want, set aside others for later, and delete the rest. Again it's far less of a chore if you do the work to get rid of the spam.
IM. It's just like the phone. You realize you can either set your status as "away" or simply not answer, right? There's a reason all IMs start with something like "You there?" And personally I'd rather click on a little X than listen to the damn phone ring for 30 seconds.
Cell phone/pager. Again, just in case you didn't know, here's a little secret. Don't tell everyone ok... you don't have to answer these either. In fact, my cell-phone has a feature they just introduced where I can even turn the ringer off! I'll get the model number/provider if anyone's interested...
I would say that interruptions like phone calls/IM are less irritating nowadays because you can actually see who the hell it is before you answer. "Private Caller" is lowest on my list... as in perhaps if I'm lost in the desert and trying to distract myself from the wild dogs gnawing at my torso.
My problem is the amount of available information. I can lost looking at interesting but meaningless things (like talking about the amount of information available... ooo how post-modern...). It requires more willpower... but overall life is easier.
I guess the one true irritant is the wife who calls at least twice a day. It requires 5-10 minutes of sub-vocal grunting before it clicks that perhaps I might have actually been doing something when she called besides staring at the phone waiting for her to call (like reading Slashdot damnit). And yet still the calls come... and when you have kids you pretty much will always choose to answer. Or else you might be a bad parent. You wouldn't want to be a bad parent would you? No, I didn't think so. Good for you.
Is time really "wasted" reading corporate email? (Score:2)
I can see where that's one possibility, but I'd just like to point out the flip side. I've worked for companies with multiple locations around the country, and there's a very large, very real cost for all the long distance phone calls that g
Microprocessor Interupts? (Score:2)
In order to prevent greedy devices from hogging all the CPU time, it will always return to the "main task" before servicing another interrupt. Not sure if this would apply to real life, but I think it could prevent you from queuing up a huge stack of work (pun intended).
interruptions to work? (Score:2)
That's easy. Get them to fuck off. (Score:2)
This isn't a technical problem, this is a social problem. The problem is that too many people want to get in touch with you. And moreover, your boss has eliminated the secretarial p
Email: Let *recipient* set "Important" flag (Score:2)
OT: Does this public post mean the idea can't be patented? $DEITY, I hope so.
The only solution that works, spam aside (Score:2, Interesting)
Everytime I have a discussion about this with clients, co-workers or business partners, I hear tales of spam filtering, rules wizards, voicemail solutions, etc.
But what everyone seem to be ignoring, is that you can just reply to the communication and let the other party know how you feel about all this unneeded communication.
Get a phone call and think it could have been handled by a mail? Say so. Get private instant messages while you're at work? Tell the sender about your working hours and ask them to
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:3, Funny)
That is, unless you're a woman. Then, regardless of the sex of recieptionist, you just hit the judicial lottery, baby! Congrats!
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:5, Funny)
Don't wanna be nit-picky here, but I guess you messed up the order.
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:2, Insightful)
Not that simple.... the reply to the second one will be a simple "yup" or "nope". The reply to the first one risks being rather involved. Hence, taking response times into account, replying to the second one first will offset the reply to the project email by a second or two, whereas replying to the first one first means your pool buddy mi
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:2)
At one time, if something was urgent, you called. If something was less urgent you snail mailed. Snail mail accumulated, and you could deal with it in large passes.
Phone calls interuppted your work and required your attention, but was usually urgent, so that was understandable.
But as you point out, an email can vary across that entire spectrum, and requires scanning it to determine when to respond. So email effectively interrupts your work like a telephone call, even
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:2)
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:3, Interesting)
The only people in my office that use priority flags are in Sales and Marketing. They don't use many critical systems, and I know their email is working fine, so whatever's left can wait 'til later. If it's a real crisis - they need new toner - they'll be in my office before I'll be able to reply anyway.
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:2)
Outlook supports a "Low priority" flag as well as the oft-abused "High priority" flag. I have never seen a message from one person to another
Re:When to reply to email? (Score:2)
Re:huh? (Score:2)
Re:huh? (Score:2)
Re:hard blocking? (Score:2)
Cant remember the name though.