SBJ: Filtering interruptions to enhance focus

Emerging Technology - Discover Magazine - E-mail Making You Crazy?

Steven Johnson on battling the email and interruption avalanches with smarter technology. He also cites the King’s College study suggesting that “multitasking” makes you less productive than if you’d been doing bong hits.

But full-screen mode is limited. You may not want to eliminate the outside world entirely. If there’s an urgent staff meeting called, you don’t want to miss the e-mail. On the other hand, you don’t want to be distracted by 15 other e-mail messages that could be read later. People already prioritize by thresholds of concentration. That’s why you may say to an assistant: “Please, don’t bother me with calls—unless it’s my spouse.”

Computers should be better at this kind of filtering, but they’re not programmed to anticipate how your attention shifts from one minute to the next. Your e-mail client doesn’t know that you’re trying to focus on another, more pressing problem. But it would be easy enough to create protocols that define different modes of concentration. Many laptops have location settings that allow you to switch from office mode to home mode and thus change a whole host of settings. Why not offer a comparable option for defining different mental states?

I do not disagree.

[ thanks, David Kuykendall ]

I can’t believe there’s not...

I can’t believe there’s not a way to associate notifications with groups of people.

So, theoretically, I could tell Mail.app to gather and hold all email for n minutes without interruption unless it’s from group foo or bar in my address book or has a subject containing my secret interruption keyword, etc.

Basically we need smart folders and smart playlists for notifications. I can do without the computer reading my mind; I just need more granularity on who gets special interrupt access. :-)