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PC Users Fight Distractions to Work

prostoalex writes "When someone buys a computer, they expect noticeable increases in productivity and ability to perform routine tasks more efficiently. At least that's what the commercials say. The New York Times talks about the dire reality: software applications do an excellent job of distracting us from doing the tasks. An e-mail notification here, an application popup there, a sound effect telling you the download has been completed and a popup window asking whether you would like to download the latest updates. Much of this distraction is self-enforced, such as taking a break from work to check the weather forecast, read the news headlines, or yet again check the e-mail inbox. NYT talks about various ways people are fighting distractions and points to some cognitive technology research done at Microsoft."

28 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. The worst one by Inkieminstrel · · Score: 4, Funny

    The worst one for me is this little app called "Firefox"

    1. Re:The worst one by Frymaster · · Score: 4, Funny
      The worst one for me is this little app called "Firefox"

      the worst work distraction for me is a little site called... slashdot.

      note: i'm at work right now :)

    2. Re:The worst one by SteveX · · Score: 4, Informative

      I had this bad habit of checking a bunch of websites constantly.. so a few years ago I set up a little bookmark site that I use as my homepage.

      http://www.stevex.org/linky

      What's just slightly unique about it (or was in 1999) is it lets you specify a timeout for sites you add, and sites whose timeout has expired are shown in bold.

      So when I bring up Firefox, I right-click on the links that are bold (to open them all in tabs), read 'em, and I'm back to work. The various timeouts mean I spend less time looking at sites that I just looked at 5 minutes ago.. (yes, I used to do that. And you probably do too, don't you?)

  2. more distractions? by ack154 · · Score: 5, Funny

    So now I have one distraction providing an article about other distractions?!

  3. hmmm by cheese_wallet · · Score: 5, Funny

    is there something ironic about me reading this article while I am at work?

  4. Willpower? by agent+dero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I've noticed the same thing, but I turned the distractions off, the little sounds, the popups, the notifications.

    Some people can focus in a crowded busy lecture hall, some people can't even focus alone in their rooms.
    People are as focussed as they want to be it seems, take this with a grain of salt, given that it's the middle of the work day, and i'm posting on slashdot..... ;)

    --
    Error 407 - No creative sig found
    1. Re:Willpower? by Achoi77 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Heh, I would say it's the distractions at work that keep me productive without going insane. Removing the distractions thru forcable means by either management babysitting you or other oppressive methods just hurts company morale. It also gives me my 'fix', so that I don't have the 'feel like the browsing for the next /. article' on the brain all day. Plus, now that I am satiated whenever I feel, I am fully capable of grinding out work for very long periods of time (weeks at a time) without feeling any 'withdrawl' symptoms if the situations needs be. After all, I DO want to do a good job.

      My manager is pretty cool. He pretty much lets me do what I want, AS LONG as I get my stuff done. And I always get my stuff done. Sure, sometimes a few mistakes slip by, but of course management is there to bitch me out, to which I always respond with, "Hrm, maybe I should control my distracting habits a bit." Management thru self government works for everybody.

  5. Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Well, If this isn't preaching to the choir...

  6. Web by Black+Cardinal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd say the biggest distraction is access to the Web.

    For example, posting on Slashdot.

  7. Attention deficit disorder? by `Sean · · Score: 5, Funny

    I had an incredibly witty thought that I wanted to share with the rest of the world, so I launched ecto, my blog client. An update was available, so I downloaded and installed it. That reminded me that I hadn't run versiontracker pro for a while, so I proceeded to launch that. Of course, an update to the software I use to check for updates with was available, so I downloaded and installed the update. Then Acrobat, BitTorrent, LimeWire, Poisoned, etc. While everything was downloading, I checked on the make install status of glibc on my Pepper Pad. Halfway done.

    Why the heck was ecto open again?

  8. Fight the Distractions! by Necroman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd have to agree that all those little popups that you get from different applications are really a bother; you get side tracked from what you are doing, and then getting back to what you were doing takes a minute or 2, or longer depending on what you were doing. This time tends to add up quickly.

    I make it a point, with any program that has popup or notifications of any kind, I do my best to turn them off. Like Outlook 2000. It has a sound beep and an Icon that appears in the systray when you get new mail. Well, disable the sounds, and set Windows to always hide that new email icon (You can't turn off the notification in Outlook 2000, but you can in 2003).

    The information the provide is nice, but I'm busy right now, get back to me when I'm not trying to figure out why this code is seg faulting 56 hours into a a 72 hour test.

    --
    Its not what it is, its something else.
  9. The antidesktop by PepsiProgrammer · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The Antidesktop

    This is why I use ratpoison+screen, that and because keyboard input is much faster and more efficient than the rodent.

    This is also why I stopped using multiple monitors, just too distracting and not a huge benefit.

    --
    "The United States has no right, no desire, and no intention to impose our form of government on anyone else." - Bush 05
  10. How it all went wrong with me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Was when I changed every audio program event on my system to play the original Star Trek red alert klaxon. I have been on state assistance ever since.

  11. The solution is by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Custom-build the worker's PC to have only apps that the job requires.

    Back when I was in the army, in the computer department, everything was removed but the programming language and the simulator we were working on. And when I say everything, that included things like defrag and scandisk, that people used to use all day long to pretend they had time to go get a cuppa and slack off. Similarly, the secretary only had Office, and email was internal-only for everybody

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
  12. Man vs. Machine by ClubStew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, let's eliminate all distractions so that 5 seconds of happiness that you receive from an email popup regarding a personal email doesn't become a problem. Eliminate checks on weather sites to see how the weather will be when traveling home and planning accordingly. Eliminate everything that could possibly take away from becoming a machine that probably takes no more than 20 minutes in an entire day.

    We are not machines, we are people. Doing repetitive tasks all day is the work of machines and can cause injury in humans. Should we not have that brief hallway chat with our friends and colleagues to satisfy the need of humans? Or should our interactions also become that of machines: necessary and nothing more.

    The distractions listed here seem rather silly and mostly harmless to most people. If a particular person is distracted too much, then fix the problem for them. For example, if someone has a window office and can't stop staring outside all day, stick them in a cubicle or something. For the most part, however, these sort of distractions are what humans often require - a quick brak.

    1. Re:Man vs. Machine by ClubStew · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You think, then, that we should become nothing more than machines at work? Perhaps we should just eliminate all offices - especially those with windows - because they allow for more distractions. And if we are to be machines, certainly we can police ourselves not to talk to even our cubicle neighbors. We could just eliminate walls and pack in even more people.

      I'm not advocating that people slack off. They're being paid to work, but little distractions here and there - like quickly checking the weather - should hardly be a problem.

      If you disagree then please explain why.

  13. No problem here by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 4, Funny

    What distractions? I thought checking my email and clicking popup boxes was my job.

    --
    (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
  14. Re:problem with assumption by marika · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's because they want to be distracted from work at a faster pace.

    --
    This is totally insecure, but very convenient.
  15. The very worst distraction... by Scratch-O-Matic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    is any app that steals the cursor focus from where I'm currently typing (or clicking) in order to show me some alert or dialog. And when I get 2 or 3 follow-on alerts yanking me back for more clicks, I want to put my boot throught the keyboard. I think whoever came up with that scheme did some bad human engineering.

    --


    Evil is the money of root.
    1. Re:The very worst distraction... by spectecjr · · Score: 3, Informative
      I know I saw that in one of the Firefox betas long before I saw it in IE ... definitely long before XP SP2, but I can't remember which update brought the feature to IE, if it was before SP2 or not ... can anyone confirm who copied who?

      The Firefox developers can confirm that they copied IE. It appeared in the XP SP2 betas, and the Firefox guys copied it while XP SP2 was still in beta. I should know; I was on the XP SP2 beta.

      They were added to the nightly builds on July 13th of last year.

      XP SP2 was in beta in February of last year.

      But hey, don't take my word for it... ask the Mozilla/Firefox developers:

      http://www.mozillazine.org/talkback.html?article=4 997

      The most recent Firefox nightlies feature a new user-interface to manage the XPInstall whitelist. When a user tries to install software from a site that is not on the whitelist, a thin non-modal yellow bar appears at the top of the content area, informing the user that the install has been blocked (bug 241705). A button allows the user to add the site to the whitelist if they choose. Testers of the beta release of Windows XP Service Pack 2 will probably find the yellow bar familiar: it's almost a carbon copy of the new Internet Explorer Information Bar that appears when an ActiveX control is blocked. If you cannot wait for Firefox 1.0 to try this feature, grab a nightly build from the 0.9 branch but remember that there may be bugs.


      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
  16. Wipper Snappers by Tablizer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I remember the good ol' days when we would goof off by walking over and talking to coworkers.

  17. How I appear busy at work by bonch · · Score: 5, Funny

    How I appear busy at work while fulfilling myself with my "distractions":

    1.) Keep a floating command prompt open running netstat. It makes it look busy and important.

    2.) Once in a while, ping 127.0.0.1. This makes me look like I'm typing something really important and examining very important output.

    3.) Fire up a new browser window that opens the company website, then randomly click shit with an intense frown on your face as though looking for something important.

    4.) Keep random sticky notes and papers sprawled around your keyboard, and randomly look over at them as though for reference. This is particularly useful when typing messageboard posts where people can hear your keyboard clacking away. You're not slacking; you're doing something important. You have scattered papers you keep looking at!

    5.) Keep a spindle for your paper messages. Collect them on this spindle and situate it beside your monitor for a quick and easy "busily cluttered" look to your desk that makes you look slightly more busy.

    6.) Have an old keyboard or other computer peripherals lying around at home? Bring them to the office and place them out of the way but in visible sight around your office/cubicle computer. Various important-looking computer parts, like an old non-functioning printer or a second keyboard "connected" to nothing, make you look like you're doing lots of crazy and important computer shit. For an added bonus, occasionally move your chair over and start clacking away on the non-functioning keyboard while looking at your monitor. Do an intense frown, say "hmm" importantly, and move back to your real keyboard and browse Slashdot some more.

    7.) Try walking around a lot in a hurry. This makes you look busy and determined. The best strategy is to go the bathroom a lot and just pace for a minute inside. My strategy is to go to the water cooler a lot. Not only does this saturate me, but I'm seen moving all over the office busily and importantly when really I'm just taking a mental break at the water cooler and fantasizing about a life that doesn't so closely resemble Hell.

    I have more tips, and I'm sure you do, so let's share.

    1. Re:How I appear busy at work by marshall_j · · Score: 4, Funny

      *longs for the days of boss keys in games*

    2. Re:How I appear busy at work by mattOzan · · Score: 5, Funny
      7.) Try walking around a lot in a hurry. This makes you look busy and determined.

      And when you do this, always have a sheaf of papers in your hand! Makes you look at least 100% busier.

      I haven't always worked in an office, though. I used to work for the U.S. Forest Service. Here's a tip for looking busy when working outdoors:

      Even though you are just standing around talking with your buddies, whenever a public comes along the key is just to point at something. Point in the direction of that thing over there, then sweep your arm over to point at something else, then make some gestures about the area in between the points.

      Works like a charm! Passersby think their tax money is being well-spent, what with all the vigorous gestulating going on over there! "Obviously an important new system for some high priority item is being expertly planned by efficient professionals..."

    3. Re:How I appear busy at work by Nefarious+Wheel · · Score: 4, Funny

      Bonch, you're fired.

      --
      Do not mock my vision of impractical footwear
  18. An Interupted Workflow is Natural by superultra · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm a historian, and I've learned that this kind of interupted work flow is nothing new. In fact, for most of our history, humans have worked this kind of "interuptive" work flow as opposed to straight working. Rural work often meant short periods of hard work punctuated by frequent but shorter periods of rest. Many times, another task demanded priority, and the workflow would change again . Labor historian Herbert Gutman has written some fantastic essays on how people carried over these agrarian work habits into industrialization. For example, workers would pool money to hire someone to read the newspaper to them while they worked, they would drink on the job, or sing songs while on the line. Here's a typical work day for a New York City dock worker in the 1840s that Gutman dug up:

    Begin work about 7:00am?.
    8:30-9:30am - "Aunt Arlie McVane" arrives selling baked goods. (Work stops or slows during her visit).
    10:30-11:00am - "Johnnie Gogean, an English candyman arrives to peddle his sweets. (15 minute break to consume candy),br> 11:00am - Whiskey break for the majority of the crew. (Length of break is not specified)
    3:30pm "Uncle Jack Gridder" shows up to distribute a "cake lunch" to workers. (Length of break is not specified)
    5:00pm "Johnnie Gogean" returns with more candy. (10 minute break to consume)
    Continue work until sunset


    The basic problem is that in a postindustrial society, we are told to associate this kind of workflow as unproductive or even lazy. It's not. It's how humans have been working for thousands of years. To work uninterupted, straight for 8 hours, is hard for us to do because it's an abnormal practice.

  19. The Information Economy is a misnomer by bitspotter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    an economics is often characterized as the study of how groups allocate scarce resources.

    Today information is anything but scarce; why people decided to call it the "information economy" is beyond me.

    What's really scarce, now that information availability has exploded, is the *attention* needed to perceive and process information. That's why the fad today is "attention deficit disorder".

    "Attention economy" would be a more descriptive term.

    When computers were computers were computers, they were there to automate the processing of information so that we could conserve our attention for other things - like communicating with others. Now, the Internet has turned computers into something entirely different - they're now *communicators*, not "computers". When your average net user says they get online mostly to "surf the web and check their email", they're talking about communications, not computing.

    The computer just happens to hang on because it happens to give those in control of it (ie, the people who write the software - NOT the user) a more efficient platform for managing users' attentions than they ever had before.

  20. Keeping a "busy" screen by TwoPumpChump · · Score: 3, Informative

    In addition to those fine 7 points, I'd add that to sucessfully web browse (or whatever) while doing those tricks you should keep Firefox un-Maximized, with whatever important-seeming app a mere task-switch, or quick mouse click away. Failing that, remember in Windows you can quickly minimize any app (Firefox, IE if so unfortunate) with a quick ALT+SPACE+N. Practice it. Get good with it. You'll be able to minimize that browser without the tell-tale mouse "wrist jerk and click" that people can see as they approach. (Everyone knows ALT+F4 but sometimes you want to finish what you're reading later, so you don't necessarily want to close the browser.)