Just wondering: when I finish my PhD research how much of it will not documented in my blog. In other words, will I be able to say to my readers something like “this is a link to my dissertation, but there is nothing new there for you”?
Trying to imagine how things will be when I finish PhD (futurecast ;) is one of my ways to get over unproductive time.
Blogging is another way – it helps starting. When I work on a paper I often write posts related to it: informal notes that later will turn into formal paragraps, side track ideas, paper summaries or just associations. Next to a good feeling of producing at least something it get’s me into a writing mode: switching from blogging to paper writing is much easier then starting directly.
It’s funny how blogosphere brings something that correlates well with your current mode (or how selective is your own attention :). Came across this old post by Joel Spolsky in the morning:
Once you get into flow it’s not too hard to keep going. Many of my days go like this: (1) get into work (2) check email, read the web, etc. (3) decide that I might as well have lunch before getting to work (4) get back from lunch (5) check email, read the web, etc. (6) finally decide that I’ve got to get started (7) check email, read the web, etc. (8) decide again that I really have to get started (9) launch the damn editor and (10) write code nonstop until I don’t realize that it’s already 7:30 pm.
Somewhere between step 8 and step 9 there seems to be a bug, because I can’t always make it across that chasm. For me, just getting started is the only hard thing. An object at rest tends to remain at rest. There’s something incredible heavy in my brain that is extremely hard to get up to speed, but once it’s rolling at full speed, it takes no effort to keep it going. Like a bicycle decked out for a cross-country, self-supported bike trip — when you first start riding a bike with all that gear, it’s hard to believe how much work it takes to get rolling, but once you are rolling, it feels just as easy as riding a bike without any gear.
Maybe this is the key to productivity: just getting started. Maybe when pair programming works it works because when you schedule a pair programming session with your buddy, you force each other to get started.
Yes, another thing to get into paper writing it to start discussing it with someone else :)
Tags: blog writing, citedCh3, flow, PhD, writingArchived version of this entry is available at http://blog.mathemagenic.com/2004/04/23.html#a1180; comments are here.
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