Then the real life … and the buggy geek’s script start to fail, create other errors , takes time for the debug … and the red line appears to not be so horizontal … ;-)
Swissmiss is a design blog and studio run by Tina Roth Eisenberg. Besides swissmiss, she founded and runs CreativeMornings, TeuxDeux, Tattly and her coworking space called Studiomates.
Haha! I absolutely agree. I was that non-geek person for a while, until I happily converted to the red line for the past couple of years.
May 15th, 2012 / 5:40 pm
There is a horizontal, invisible, white line at the bottom of the chart, coming straight to you.
May 15th, 2012 / 6:08 pm
Add multiple non-identical tasks to run concurrently and consequetively, and the geek approach starts to suffer.
a happy medium between the two is ideal. But it’s only the geek that can do ‘non-geek’ way, but they rarely do. Thus the non-geek wins in real world.
May 16th, 2012 / 4:11 am
Then the real life … and the buggy geek’s script start to fail, create other errors , takes time for the debug … and the red line appears to not be so horizontal … ;-)
May 16th, 2012 / 5:38 am
The chart misses the green line. The lazy one who just skips the task and wins all the time.
May 16th, 2012 / 6:06 am
Absolutely agree.
May 16th, 2012 / 6:55 am
How do you chart the line indicating the repetitive tasks are outsourced to China / India and done for 1/3 the cost?
May 17th, 2012 / 5:41 pm
What about relevance of the task, by the time automation happens.
The non-geek might actually WIN.
May 17th, 2012 / 9:56 pm
But usually doesn’t.
May 18th, 2012 / 10:31 am