About monotasking

Work 3 Comments »

Fabian told me that managers and software developers plan their workday differently. While managers divide their day into blocks of one hour, developers tend to think in larger blocks of about four hours. While it is no problem for managers to pick an empty time slot to fit in a meeting, this block could prevent a developer from being productive, since this meeting will fragment his block leaving him less time to concentrate on a task at a stretch.

This story and a blog post I read some time ago made me think about interruptions at work. It seems there are interruptions we don't want and interruptions we perform by ourselves. The last is about multitasking: checking e-mails, feeds, Twitter or answering my coworkers via Instant Messaging. Some of us tend to use the small time gaps to do something else than the current task. It is so easy to read some feeds during a compiler run or wile you are waiting for SVN. But is that really necessary?

I myself tend to do lots of multitasking. I have always been a young and restless person using the smallest break to do something else. As I am getting older (and wiser, hopefully!) I tend to question things or at least I try to do things differently. As I can not avoid any interruption on my workday I can at least try to stay focussed and use time gaps for either giving my brains a break or to think about what I am doing at the moment. I will try to do one thing at a time. I will read e-mails less often, but more mails at a stretch instead. Same goes for RSS feeds and Twitter. I am not quite sure how to handle Instant Messaging, but I will probably at least finish my current thoughts before reading the message.

Do you have any experiences with monotasking? How do you handle interruptions and what are your strategies? Feel free to comment on this. :-)

Celebrating qooxdoo 0.7.3

qooxdoo, Work 1 Comment »

qooxdoo 0.7.3 was released this morning. Being a minor release which includes many bugfixes and improves stability of the framework, this release still is one of the largest in the history of this project. See the official announcement for a list of new features.

Have fun! :-)

Working in Bosnia and Herzegovina

Travel, Work No Comments »

The last four days just went by so fast, that I can hardly believe that today is the last night in Banja Luka. It was an interesting experience to get out of the company building and see a completely different part of Europe. I never have been to the eastern Europe before, so I was surprised how well developed and western-orientated Bosnia and Herzegovina, but especially Croatia are.

Florian and I took the plane from Stuttgart and arrived about an hour later in Zagreb from where we continued our journey with a rental car to Banja Luka. Tomorrow we will take the same way back, but take a new external co-worker with us.

I do not want to write a long travelogue about my time here, therefor I will concentrate on the important part: with each journey you take you will gather experiences and learn...

What I learned about IT

  1. It is possible to work prolific with just a laptop and a desk.
  2. Skype will replace calling cards.
  3. I will never get excited about theoretical features and techniques until I know for sure that they actually work.
  4. Outsourcing only applies to code monkeys. Hopefully! :-/
  5. Camtasia Studio is a great tool.
  6. I just can not talk about programming the whole day long. Especially not for four days...

What I learned about Bosnia and Herzegovina

  1. Bosnian radio stations, which are cool, play the same songs as in Germany. And in every other western country I guess...
  2. The people are really hearty and prove to be great hosts.
  3. The food is very tasty here: so much meat! :-)
  4. Traffic lights blink green before they switch.
  5. A tip of 10% is usual.
  6. All 30 Cyrillic letters can be mapped 1:1 to latin ones.
  7. German cars are so favored here that you are not allowed to take a rental car of German brands into the country.

What I learned for life

  1. Germans still have a good reputation. :)
  2. There are geeks in every country.
  3. My (spoken) English is much better than I tought.
  4. Germany is not the only country in which cars are a status symbol.
  5. There are actually Irish Pubs that do not offer Guinness or Cider!
  6. Germans are driving and parking much better than they appear to. This is even true for people from Cologne!

Off for a business trip

Travel, Work 1 Comment »

For the next week I will be on my first business trip to Bosnia and Herzegovina, together with my co-worker Florian. We will stay at this nice hotel "Firenza" from Monday until Friday in the second biggest city: Banja Luka.
As we will have WLAN we both will probably do some blogging. ;-)


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Google Devloper Day 2007

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I wish I could be in Hamburg right now, but unfortunately I have a tough milestone ending tomorrow. So, I even can not watch the web casts — but of course I will do this on the weekend (if they are available on Google Video).
I am begrudging my boss for having this great opportunity to see the sessions, take part in the workshops and to make contacts... I really have to ask him out tomorrow. ;-)
Hopefully there will be another Developer Day next year in Germany...

Update:
Vladislav Malicevic at Google Developer Days 2007
I found the lucky guy!


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