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Charles Murray
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Blogger
Re: Bad timing
Charles Murray   10/10/2012 6:14:43 PM
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Ann, I've always been curious about how much time I must spend looking for stuff I've lost. I'll bet that 10% of my time goes to that category.

Ann R. Thryft
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Bad timing
Ann R. Thryft   10/10/2012 12:06:42 PM
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I clean up periodically, since I periodically get gridlock from not being able to find things.

Charles Murray
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Bad timing
Charles Murray   10/9/2012 7:28:10 PM
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I've talked about being a neatnik. I've even made plans to clean up more often. Never seems to happen, though.

78RPM
User Rank
Silver
Re: Bad timing
78RPM   10/9/2012 12:57:55 PM
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I used to have a filing system: "Newest on the top; oldest on the bottom." Then our company adopted a clean desk policy -- for security of intellectual property. I got organized and cleaned up my act and found that I liked it. I adopted a new policy of tearing up failed experiments. If I wanted to keep an article I tore it out and filed it where I would use it instead of keeping the whole magazine.

Engineers are lucky not to have to abide by HIPAA confidentiality law that must be observed by clinics and hospitals. If they work with such clients they must understand their role in keeping confidential info locked up.

Ann R. Thryft
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Bad timing
Ann R. Thryft   10/9/2012 12:30:22 PM
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Voigt's "workspace" is unbelievable. I guess it could be worse--there are actual aisles between the piles--but doesn't it take at least as much time to find stuff as it does to work? Aside from that lost bill, I eventually became a neatnik in my office, workshop, and kitchen because I hated having an inspiration and then not being able to do it for want of finding the tools. By the time I found the tools/backup info/whatever the inspiration might have disappeared and I was an unhappy, frustrated non-creator.

rebowker
User Rank
Iron
"Clean up, clean up, everybody everywhere..."
rebowker   10/9/2012 11:55:31 AM
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My take is this: there is a messy desk, and then there is a messy desk. One messy desk is piled with data from past projects, white papers, spec sheets, etc., basically a free air open-looped file cabinet. That is geniune messy. In another blog post I stated messy desk vs clean desk are two different information management strategies. In the end the benchmark is how much time it takes to find whatever is being looked for. THEN there is a messy desk. That just needs to be cleaned up. I'm sorry, I see that coke cans and serpentine tangled phone cords are not included in the true spirit of the open-looped free air information management style of our revered engineering forefathers.

Jon Titus
User Rank
Blogger
Re: Bad timing
Jon Titus   10/9/2012 11:25:26 AM
An empty desk is a sign of someone who got laid off.

ChasChas
User Rank
Gold
Chicken or the Egg
ChasChas   10/9/2012 11:14:31 AM
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Did shame turn to pride or pride turn to shame?

A celebration of our human part.

ervin0072002
User Rank
Gold
Re: Bad timing
ervin0072002   10/9/2012 10:50:07 AM
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An empty desk is a sign of a completed project.

Electron Boy
User Rank
Iron
Re: Impressive
Electron Boy   10/9/2012 10:46:15 AM
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I think I see the fish on the printer.

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