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Time to Focus

The cell phone is buzzing, your office phone ringing, and eight emails just arrived. As soon as you finish handling these, it starts all over again. And we wonder why we can't come up with that big idea, or write that report, or finish that project.

Recently, a psychiatrist at King's College London University checked the IQ of workers throughout the day. He discovered that the IQ of those who tried to juggle messages and work fell by as much as 10 points. Distractions not only steal our time, but rob us of valuable intelligence.

So, how do we regain a bit of focus in our day? Here are a few ideas.

Find your best time

My best time for good thinking is in the morning, but I know others that perk up at night. Find the time of day when your mind is sharpest, and try to do work that needs strong focus during that time.

Limit distractions

Close your email client, turn of your cell phone, and shut of your IM client. Most office phones can be set to "do not disturb." If you have an assistant, have them hold calls and take messages. Sure, you can't lock yourself all day, but can you do it for an hour or two? 

Go away

If you have the flexibility to do so, get out of the office for an hour or two. There's a cafe near our offices that has good coffee and free wireless internet. When I need to crank out an article or think up a strategy, I'll get up early, find a table and work for an hour or so. Every time I do, I'm amazed at how much I get done in that short time.

Bottom line: Need to think clearly? Find your best time of day and shut off distractions. You'll not only feel smarter, you'll work smarter.

 

 
MashUps

Web applications are basically software programs that you use on the Internet. You don't have to download them to your computer. 

There are "webapps" that can: keep you from getting lost, keep you on task, keep you organized, find you great deals, and just about everything in between.

One very popular application is the photo sharing site, Flickr. Flickr is extremely easy to use, free, robust, and extensible.

What I mean by "extensible" is you can actually use Flickr and other webapps (in simplistic terms) as building blocks to make other even more useful and powerful webapps.

Here's an example of this extensibility, Microsoft recently acquired an application (PhotoSynth) that "takes a large collection of photos of a place or an object, analyzes them for similarities, and displays them in a reconstructed three-dimensional space." That "large collection of photos" is... you guessed it, at Flickr.

What makes PhotoSynth such a big deal? Well do you remember that trip you took to DisneyWorld last year? You will be able revisit the trip, on any particular day of your vacation, and in it's full 360 degree glory. You will be able to zoom in and see extreme detail (you may be able to see faces-- quite possibly even your own).

Why I get so hyped about it is it's developers used a simple idea (shared photos), expounded on it and made an incredible tool.

Here's another, less grand "MashUp" I found tonight, it's 123FLICKR.com. This application simply allows me to show you a gallery of my latest "not work related" images on Flickr. 



You can see more about PhotoSynth here, on YouTube-- another great webapp!
 

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