Better Living Through Thinking |
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Graham: Good and Bad ProcrastinationFri, 03 Feb 2006Excerpt from a recent Paul Graham essay: <http://www.paulgraham.com/procrastination.html> The cost of an interruption is not just the time it takes, but that it
breaks the time on either side in half. You probably only have to
interrupt someone a couple times a day before they're unable to work
on hard problems at all.
I've wondered a lot about why startups are most productive at the very beginning, when they're just a couple guys in an apartment. The main reason may be that there's no one to interrupt them yet. In theory it's good when the founders finally get enough money to hire people to do some of the work for them. But it may be better to be overworked than interrupted. Once you dilute a startup with ordinary office workers-- with type-B procrastinators-- the whole company starts to resonate at their frequency. They're interrupt-driven, and soon you are too. |
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Mon Feb 6 23:55:47 MST 2012 |