Category: Link

  • Speed matters: Why working quickly is more important than it seems” – James Somers°

    The obvious benefit to working quickly is that you’ll finish more stuff per unit time. But there’s more to it than that. If you work quickly, the cost of doing something new will seem lower in your mind. So you’ll be inclined to do more.

    […] Time is especially valuable. So as we learn that a task is slow, an especial cost accrues to it. Whenever we think of doing the task again, we see how expensive it is, and bail.

    That’s why speed matters.

    […] The prescription must be that if there’s something you want to do a lot of and get good at—like write, or fix bugs—you should try to do it faster.

    That doesn’t mean be sloppy. But it does mean, push yourself to go faster than you think is healthy.

    […] Being fast is fun. If you’re a fast writer, you’ll constantly be playing with new ideas. You won’t be bogged down in a single dread effort. And because your to-do list gets worked off, you’ll always be thinking of more stuff to add to it.

    I have a tendency to try and perfect things and do them too well. ‘Good enough’ is something I need to say way more often.

    I’ve known that for a while. But what this article made me realise is that if I am faster – and tasks are less arduous – I might be more likely to start tasks. And struggling to start tasks is something I severely suffer from daily.

    I’m going to start right now, in fact.

    I have blog post I drafted earlier. I’m not going to perfect it. Instead I’m going to set myself a 15 minute timer and get it published.

    Update: I did it.

  • List of individual rocksWikipedia°

    The following is a list of notable rocks and stones.

  • A generation gets their John Lennon moment (kind of). “Liam Payne, former One Direction singer, dies aged 31”.

  • Cheating alleged after men’s world conker champion found with steel chestnutThe Guardian°

    The winner, 82-year-old David “King Conker” Jakins that he used a steel conker to win.

    This is his first time winning the competition, after 47 years of trying (since 1977).

    To be honest, after 47 years I’d be tempted to cheat to win too.

    The chap who lost in the men’s final against “King Conker” said:

    “My conker disintegrated in one hit, and that just doesn’t happen … I’m suspicious of foul play and have expressed my surprise to organisers.”

    I love stories like this.

    And I’m pleased and surprised to see it get attention from both Hacker News and Sky News (video).

    Update, 22 October 2024: He’s been declared innocent. The trial of the century is over.