Comment author: ChristianKl 23 October 2014 09:28:58PM 1 point [-]

What's the current estimated time when the project will finish?

Comment author: alexvermeer 25 October 2014 10:11:31PM 1 point [-]

Hopefully by the end of the year.

Comment author: Vulture 25 February 2014 07:40:24PM 3 points [-]

Cool!

By the way, are there any plans to eventually publish some of these MIRI-related ebooks in print form? Paper books tend to convey greater credibility than ebook-only.

Comment author: alexvermeer 08 May 2014 03:05:14AM 0 points [-]

FYI, Smarter Than Us is now available in print form. :-)

Comment author: Creutzer 02 January 2014 11:14:45AM 2 points [-]

Do you have reservations about making that app you use for tracking available so that others can be spared the trouble of having to find one?

Comment author: alexvermeer 02 January 2014 03:06:09PM 2 points [-]

Unfortunately, the app is in extremely alpha stages, running locally, and I doubt I'll prioritize it over other projects.

Comment author: BenLowell 02 January 2014 09:22:20AM *  5 points [-]

How do you not get fatigued with recording things?

What are your recommendations for amount of structure before you incorporate pomodoros? Is there any structural/organizational stuff you should have set up before you do them?

Comment author: alexvermeer 02 January 2014 03:03:33PM 7 points [-]

How do you not get fatigued with recording things?

I'm actually a bit surprised that I was able to maintain my recording for over a year. Some reasons why I think I was successful in hindsight:

  1. Since I made the tracking app myself, I was excited to use it for the first little bit.
  2. I intentionally made my tracking app such that I could see my daily, weekly, and category totals, all at once for a given week, which is important for me since my primarily unit of productivity measurement/planning is the week.
  3. I came to realize that tracking all of the categories was key to the whole thing working. By tracking e.g. miscellaneous stuff (which seems pretty pointless at times), you're given a constant reminder that you are "covering all your bases."
  4. After tracking pomodoros for several months, not tracking pomodoros made it feel like I wasn't being productive.
  5. Once I passed a critical threshold, I was motivated by the thought of having an entire year's worth of data.

What are your recommendations for amount of structure before you incorporate pomodoros? Is there any structural/organizational stuff you should have set up before you do them?

You need basically zero structure to start using pomodoros; just a task and some time to work on it. (I say this especially because I'm really bad for wanting my system to be "perfect" before I use it.) I treaded the pomodoro waters for several months before delving in to tracking everything. My organization system, in short, is having a +/-5 year plan, a current year plan, and current quarter plan, and current month plan, and then specific tasks/projects for the current week (which I roughly estimate in pomodoros, or at least aim to hit a certain total for the week).

Comment author: Risto_Saarelma 01 January 2014 09:56:29PM 24 points [-]

Reports of productivity techniques working past the honeymoon period are very valuable. Thank you for posting this.

Comment author: alexvermeer 02 January 2014 02:48:48PM 4 points [-]

Thanks for the encouragement. :-)

Comment author: [deleted] 02 January 2014 12:15:49AM *  8 points [-]

In response to comment by [deleted] on One Year of Pomodoros
Comment author: alexvermeer 02 January 2014 02:48:17PM 3 points [-]

I've been meaning to check this out. Thanks for the reminder.

Comment author: DaFranker 02 January 2014 01:04:22PM 2 points [-]

Real artists ship.

Possibly the best part about the web app. Despite the fact that the app looks more useful than any of the pomodoro apps I've seen before.

Comment author: alexvermeer 02 January 2014 02:47:44PM 1 point [-]

Real artists ship

Apparently attributed to Steve Jobs, though it was Seth Godin's book Linchpin that drove this point home for me.

One Year of Pomodoros

22 alexvermeer 01 January 2014 09:27PM

(Pomodoros have been talked about a bunch on LW. I, like elharo, first started using the technique after attending a CFAR workshop. Cross-posted from my blog.)

The pomodoro technique is, in short, starting a timer and doing 25 minutes of focused work on a single task without interruption, followed by a five minute break. Choose a new task, restart the timer, and repeat.

Throughout 2013 I used pomodoros to execute on pretty much all of my life projects, organized into the following categories:

  • work – at MIRI
  • bizdev – other income-generating projects
  • growth – personal development projects (e.g. reading books, taking notes, making Anki decks; monthly reviews)
  • misc – miscellaneous life maintenance projects (e.g. banking stuff, knocking off a bunch of small todo’s, house cleanup)
  • health – exercise projects (mostly climbing, some running, some misc other stuff)

The Result: 5,008 Pomodoros

The end result was 2,504 hours of recorded work—5,008 pomodoros in total: 

Stacked Pomodoros by Week in 2013

2013pomodoros

A summary, by category (with hours in brackets):

  • work – 2,457 (1,228.5h) – 47.3 (23.7h) avg/week
  • bizdev – 700 (350h) – 13.5 (6.7h) avg/week
  • growth – 996 (498h) – 19.2 (9.6h) avg/week
  • misc – 448 (224h) – 8.6 (4.3h) avg/week
  • health – 407 (203.5h) – 7.8 (3.9h) avg/week

Grand Total: 5,008 (2,504h) – 96.3 (48.2h) avg/week

My version of the pomodoro technique

To be clear, I didn’t use the pomodoro technique 100% faithfully. Certain things here, such as most Health (exercise) stuff, I never actually ran a pomodoro timer. But since I had a system for tracking where and how I spent my time, and since “claiming” all that time helped motivate me e.g. to climb regularly, I included them.

Ways I deviate from the “true” pomodoro technique:

  • I don’t always take breaks. For example, if I do two pomodoros, get in the zone, and work for another two hours straight, I’d still record that as 6 pomodoros (3 hours) total.
  • I don’t always use a timer. Sometimes I just start working, remembering to take small intermittent breaks, and record the total time in pomodoros (4h of work = 8 pomodoros).
  • I don’t record interruptions. You’re supposed to track all internal and external interruptions, but I don’t bother with that. I merely try remain conscious of interruptions and eliminate/avoid them as much as possible.
  • I don’t let interruptions cancel out pomodoros. Let’s say I work for fifteen minutes and someone comes in to chat about something important that’s been on their mind. I know that “a pomodoro is indivisible”, but screw it, I chat, and when the conversation ends I count a pomodoro after ten more minutes of work. Pomodoro blasphemy? Maybe.
  • I don’t always set targets. I don’t constantly set detailed pomodoro targets and track how many pomodoros were actually required. I only do this occasionally if I think my estimating ability is getting really off. I do set weekly pomodoro targets by category.

How did I track?

Near the end of 2012 I whipped up a simple web app that I use for tracking all of my pomodoros. Here’s a sample screenshot from a week from earlier this year:

pomodoro-tracker

Every pomodoro added is given a description, project, major area, and count. This way I can view all pomodoros by project, area, over a given date range, etc. (I’m pretty sure there are other apps out there that let you do basically the same thing, but I haven’t taken much time to explore them.)

Why I think it’s worked really well for me

Of all the productivity hacks I’ve tried over the last decade, the pomodoro technique was, for me, the hands-down most effective technique. My thoughts on why the pomodoro technique has worked so well for me:

  • It helps you start – start the timer and then just start working. You’ve already decided what to work on, so just start already.
  • It helps you focus on one thing at a time – work on only one thing and ignore everything else.
  • It helps you prioritize – look at your lists/projects/tasks/whatever, pick the most important thing to work on, and then just start already.
  • It helps create success spirals – when you have 5 successful pomodoros under your belt, it’s motivation to keep going.

In summary, if you haven’t yet, I highly recommend giving the pomodoro technique a try.

Comment author: TheTerribleTrivium 12 December 2013 05:34:45PM 0 points [-]

I recently read the sequences at a fairly rapid pace using the ebooks versions available on my ipad and there were certainly a few common things I found intensely irritating. I definitely found some of the sequences interesting enough to read again more closely. Which of the sequences are included in the ebook?

Comment author: alexvermeer 14 December 2013 12:01:42AM 3 points [-]

Basically all of them, with some modifications (e.g. a significantly reduced QM sequence), and with some reorganizing to improve flow.

Comment author: passive_fist 12 December 2013 09:13:59PM 3 points [-]

Will the ebook be offered for free?

Comment author: alexvermeer 13 December 2013 11:58:56PM 3 points [-]

It will probably be available as pay-what-you-want, similar to the Facing the Intelligence Explosion ebook.

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