I have, however, found that tasks that repeat end up being estimatable
after a while. I do keep a time log in excel, and that lets me get a
rough idea. Then I set a timer, and try to do the goal in precisely the
amount of time specified and by prototyping I figure out how good my
estimates are.
GTD purposefully sidesteps this whole issue, it's a list driven system
b/c the assumption is that you're a busy exec who is constantly being
interrupted and can't block out time. Personally, I still need to use
Covey's QII notion of allocating time for long term important (but
sometimes not very fun) projects in order to get them done. Lists make
them too easy to skip / avoid.
It's a problem with certain tasks, which don't really have a beginnig
or an end, but rather simply require attention. Things like "water
plants' are easy to estimate; do it once with a timer and you've got
it. Creative tasks are more difficult, whether coding or other.
I tend to do as Ennis does, and make a next-action to be "spend 20
minutes setting up foobar drawing," and just make hashmarks on the card
to show that I've done a block.
20 minutes is the point where I'm supposed to get up and stretch, and
it also works well with the idea of trying to make each next action as
small and atomic as possible, so you can look at a set of five cards on
the desk and think, "yup, that's my morning."
As ever, of course, have had varying levels of success, YMMV, yadda
yadda, eat your vegetables.
Cheers,
Josh
Miguel
Keep a log of your estimated times, then note the actual elapsed times;
maybe you'll find your own ratio.
> Keep a log of your estimated times, then note the actual elapsed
times;
> maybe you'll find your own ratio.
On that subject, does anyone have advice for good time tracking
software?
I'd love something on my mac that tracks how long I've had what window
open. Although I'm sure I'd hate to see the answer to that, some days.
:)
> For estimating software projects (some items might be applicable to
> other tasks) then some good straight-forward advice can be found
here:
>
> http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/fog0000000245.html
That is, indeed, an excellent article.
But I wanted to highlight an excerpt that shows that there is *always*
an exception:
> As I write this, Netscape's 5.0 web browser is almost two years late.
Partially, this is because they
> made the suicidal mistake of throwing out all their code and starting
over: the same mistake that
> doomed Ashton-Tate, Lotus, and Apple's MacOS to the recycle-bins of
software history.
Well, you know....
Two out of three ain't bad. :)
Cheers,
Josh
(Yes, I know, OS X didn't actually throw out all code and start over,
also see Carbon, and in 2000 that *was* the publicly-stated strategy,
and all that. Let me snark, it's been a rough week already. :))
Another way to do this is to figure out what your atomic focus unit is
- how long can you guarantee to work without interruption? 10 minutes?
20? 2 hours? Then you could how many focus quanta you use per task.
This is good b/c it makes the work a bit purer, but also acknowledges
that you have to take breaks along the way.
As for ratios, I find mine varies pretty highly depending on level of
alertness, time of day (related), and type of task. I'm only well able
to predict repetitive tasks after several iterations, and more creative
or new tasks not at all (which is why I use time / word targets)
I am using a trial version of WorkTime 3 from
http://www.nestersoft.com/worktime. Here is a description:
WorkTime is a project tracker surveys the time you spent working with
your PC. It gathers statistics about projects you worked with, programs
you run and time you spent running them. WorkTime displays various
statistics about your working time. WorkTime can remind you to take
regular breaks to prevent computer-related injuries.
todd.