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I had a manager who believed in mutable lists. Every night, you leave yourself a list in priority order of whatâs not yet done. As you work through the day, you add to the list AT THE BOTTOM⊠or occasionally jump off the list and manage a crisis. Last thing in the day, you build a new prioritized list for tomorrow. Anything thatâs been on the list more than a week simply gets put on the âsomedayâ list⊠and thus forgotten.
I found it cumbersome for my work style, which is much more about having ONE item (plus inevitable interruptions) youâre working on. And a bucket of âwhen Iâm done with thisâ items. Pretty often Iâd build the pieces of the project and then merge them⊠but sometimes Iâd build a project scaffold first and then hang functionality on it. The âsoftware as a serviceâ folks prefer that latter: You can ship on a momentâs notice⊠with some pieces âTBDâ.
A novelist, Dickens I think, was in college and in debt. So he sat down and made a list of debts and assets, the former much longer that the later, and how to mange them. Took him most of a morning. He then reread the list, heard the noon bells, decided to think about it later, tore up the list, and went off to borrow a shilling for lunch and a beer.
Thatâs when you realize how comfortable you are doing all those silly little time-wasting things â itâs even worse now with cellphones and idle games.
thevideostoreguy 2 months ago
Procrastinating so hard itâs pre-emptive.
Concretionist 2 months ago
I had a manager who believed in mutable lists. Every night, you leave yourself a list in priority order of whatâs not yet done. As you work through the day, you add to the list AT THE BOTTOM⊠or occasionally jump off the list and manage a crisis. Last thing in the day, you build a new prioritized list for tomorrow. Anything thatâs been on the list more than a week simply gets put on the âsomedayâ list⊠and thus forgotten.
I found it cumbersome for my work style, which is much more about having ONE item (plus inevitable interruptions) youâre working on. And a bucket of âwhen Iâm done with thisâ items. Pretty often Iâd build the pieces of the project and then merge them⊠but sometimes Iâd build a project scaffold first and then hang functionality on it. The âsoftware as a serviceâ folks prefer that latter: You can ship on a momentâs notice⊠with some pieces âTBDâ.
sandpiper 2 months ago
A novelist, Dickens I think, was in college and in debt. So he sat down and made a list of debts and assets, the former much longer that the later, and how to mange them. Took him most of a morning. He then reread the list, heard the noon bells, decided to think about it later, tore up the list, and went off to borrow a shilling for lunch and a beer.
sandpiper 2 months ago
Frazz would be wise not to become an item on Caulfieldâs âto-doâ list. Could make for frustrating days.
DaBump Premium Member 2 months ago
Thatâs when you realize how comfortable you are doing all those silly little time-wasting things â itâs even worse now with cellphones and idle games.
The Wolf In Your Midst 2 months ago
Never put off âtil tomorrow what you can get out of doing entirely.
rshive 2 months ago
Caulfield learns of life.
JudyAz 2 months ago
First item on the list:
âMake a list ofâŠâ
DM2860 2 months ago
He just needs to cross off the useless ones.
Richard S Russell Premium Member 2 months ago
Top 10 Reasons to Procrastinate:
1.
gammaguy 2 months ago
My favorite list is a starboard list.