06/04/2020

The archive contains older posts which may no longer reflect my current views.

# I thought the Queen's speech last night was excellent, perfectly measured and exactly what people needed to hear without being condescending.

The narrative around coronavirus has long been that we are at war and she built on that perfectly with various references both obvious and subtle, even down to the "we'll meet again" nod summoning up images of Vera Lynn and the whole war time spirit.

# I made a subtle change last night now that no previous posts are listed on the Today page. Rather than the "day link" above the menu always pointing to yesterday I thought it made sense for it to point to the last day with posts if there weren't any yesterday or Today.

Updated

# The change to "day links" only applies if there are no posts yet today.

# I wrote in this morning's session about how having to work from home meant that my day had an element of structure, that I wasn't scrabbling around for something to do for those 8 hours each week day. The idea was that this structure keeps me occupied and stops me getting bored.

I think it would actually be the opposite.

My job is predominantly reactive, we work according to strict SLAs: our hotline must be answered within three rings, emails picked up as quickly as possible and everything to be responded to within 15 minutes. It's the kind job where, unless you're working on any particular task or project, you spend your day waiting for things to happen.

When everyone is in the office this isn't so bad, there is normally quite a lot going on and the busy periods surpass the downtime. With everyone working from home a different reality has set in, a lot more is being done via phone call or video conference, the range of work being done is reduced meaning there are less things that might require assistance or support resulting in less for my team to do.

We use a remote VPN tunnel solution which means that our laptops and IP phones connect just as they do when in the office (I had to have this shipped to me after lockdown kicked in) so the rules about responding to things still apply. The problem is less to do means any failure to meet those rules introduces a disproportionate percentage failure: 1 missed call out of 100 is only 1 percent, 1 missed call out of only 3 suddenly means your stats look appalling!

Consequently, the feeling of being stuck at your (makeshift) desk is amplified for fear of missing anything. This actually makes things more boring with the longer periods of downtime interspersed with fewer tasks. I manage to do a few non work related things during the day (typing this post for example) but am never able to give them my full attention, the attention that they deserve, leading to a feeling of frustration.

While I would not have the enforced semi-structure to my day, I feel not having to work would allow me to be more productive, more creative; I could get more things done around that house, I could spend more time concentrating on writing, could do more reading, or assist my wife with various things as she works from home.

Perhaps there is an element of "forbidden fruit" about this, that were I to actually have an extra 8 hours a day to do with as I pleased that I would soon get bored and start craving the structure imposed by work. Perhaps there would only so much that I could find to do before cabin fever set in meaning this whole point is moot.

At least I would get bored on my own terms.

# Things may have been a little janky earlier - I decided to actually add the cookie to set whether the site is displayed in normal "Today view" or the new "Daily view".

A new dynamic link is in the footer to switch between the new "views" and the cookie is valid for 30 days from the time it is set. It's a bit of fun.