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> Pomodoro method
how do you keep track of all the things you want to wind the eggtimer up for?
what is the method to decide which goes next?
what do you do when while you work on one thing and you get a really good idea about another project that you have in the pipeline and you don't want to forget it?
how do you keep track of the progress of one project when it turns out it needs a few more egg timer sessions?
what is your method to include the current weather in your planning?
brave ai:
> The Pomodoro Technique is a time management method developed by Francesco Cirillo in the late 1980s that breaks work into 25-minute intervals called pomodoros, separated by 5-minute breaks. After completing four pomodoros, the user takes a longer break of 15 to 30 minutes. This structured approach aims to improve focus, reduce procrastination, and prevent burnout by limiting distractions and ensuring regular rest.
> Simple as
why 25 minutes when you can set 5 minutes for small stuff 10 minutes for medium stuff and 20 minutes for more complicated stuff. clearly this is designed for students who have like 4 different courses and did not know how to divide their time between 4 big subjects. what do you do when you have 75 to 150 projects at any given moment because you live in the information age.
having rules about how long a break is seems excessive, seems like whoever is doing the pomodoro doesn't really want to do the thing in the first place and has to train himself/ force himself not to do it. that's for people smart enough to pass the course but not smart enough to question if the course adds anything useful to their life thinking their degree will open them doors -_-
... yeah doors to corrupt places you'd never want to work at if you knew what they were really like beyond what they say about themselves through clever marketing designed to fool people...