
This is a rather aggressive looking desk….
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This is a rather aggressive looking desk….
Multitasking gives you an illusion of being productive?
People who multitask a lot are in fact a lot worse at filtering irrelevant information and also perform significantly worse at switching between task, compared to singletaskers.
Now most studies all point towards the fact that multitasking is very bad for us. We get less productive and skills like filtering out irrelevant information decline. Personally I had the same results without ever reading the above studies before. I put some things in place, especially with working online, to win my productivity back and ban multitasking from my workflow once and for all.
read the rest here
via lifehacker
I vote for myth…
I am quite sure that multitasking is a mind trick that you can train yourself to do. From personal experience, I have found that continuous multitasking can become a normality for your brain. Preparing your brain to process more information than usual makes it more aware of it, and you learn to process it faster. This doesn’t mean you will be able to teach yourself things faster, only that you will be able to sift out the non important information that is streamed through your senses. Compare it to someone who can sift through a page in a book in a couple of seconds and know exactly what it is all about. They haven’t read the entire page in that short period of time, they have merely learned the skill of how to find the key words that make up the story of it.
via bit rebels
“Strategy is not only getting to point a to point b but what are you going to accomplish by going to point a to point b -Happy Caldwell”
For me one of the things missing from some so called productivity methodologies is that the purpose for getting things done gets lost in the act of getting things done.

Lee’s Week Chart aims to give you a simple way to roadmap your week so you can accomplish what you want to, not just what you need to. Each day and week get three desired outcomes. They also get a daily focus so you can decide how you want your brain working each day. Once you fill out the chart, place it next to your desk and you’re good to go. You’ll find Lee’s full instructions and a printable copy of the chart over on his blog.
Introducing The Week Chart by David Lee
via lifehacker
So the only one of these chairs my hind quarters has actually had the pleasure sitting in is the Aeron chair and folks it was a metaphysical experience.
According to U.S. Ergonomics, here are the top chairs for comfort and health:
#1: Steelcase Leap, $850Also on the list (in no order):
2. Freedom by Humanscale, $1305
3. Acuity by Allsteel, $1250 (covered here by Unpluggd)
4. Life by Knoll, $1240
5. Aeron by Herman Miller, $930
6. Zody by Haworth, $880 (featured here on Re-Nest)
via unplggd