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Questions about time.

2 pointsby thecircusb0yalmost 15 years ago
As I'm waking up this morning I came across the same standard thought many of us ponder. Why can't I get more sleep? However this extended into, isn't the 24 hours "day" kind've ancient? Aren't our lives filled with so much more to do than way back in the days when the idea of measuring time was founded? So Hacker News, what do you think? Do you need more time? Feel as though theres too much to do day to day? Have any tips and tricks to dealing with the bottleneck of our current time system?(Can you unthrottle my time?)<p>Before hitting submit I realize how time measurement is fathomed what with the change in daylight, and then using some extreme math with the planets revolution around the sun. But I still love the input of people here.

2 comments

corin_almost 15 years ago
While you have a point of sorts, changing from a 24 hour day wouldn't help, there's no way to actually create more time. If days were twice as long then we might get more done "in a day", but we'd also live for half as long as we do currently, it would just balance out.<p>Personally I have DSPS (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delayed_sleep_phase_syndrome" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delayed_sleep_phase_syndrome</a>) which does make the typical structure of a 24 hour day a real pain for me.<p>Right now I'm working in a job that requires me to be actively working at 9am, yet I'm at my most active/awake state late at night. Luckily I do most of my work at home, travelling up to the office once every couple of weeks at most, so as long as I'm available during 9-5 hours, I'm still fine to leave the work that needs me at my most productive for the evening, and the work is pretty flexible in terms of when I want to take a few hours or even a few days off.<p>I changed my role slightly at the start of the year so 2010 I've been mostly working from home or in the office, but for the two years before that I would be travelling to events, some in the UK, some in Asia and most in Europe, very regularly (I think I worked it out that in 2009 I spent ~35% of the year's days outside the country). That was a real pain, because when you're away working you can't create your own schedule. Luckily sleeping pills were helpful (I ended up taking them every other night when away, which left me able to drink plenty on the other nights, as alcohol+sleeping pills don't mix well).<p>DSPS isn't exactly a reply to your question, it just exacerbates the problem for me. I do also find I don't have enough time to do nearly as much as I'd like to, the things that I think get left behind the most (compared to how much time I'd like to spend on them) are exercise, reading novels and coding.
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Mzalmost 15 years ago
<i>Have any tips and tricks to dealing with the bottleneck of our current time system?(Can you unthrottle my time?)</i><p>Lots of people are prisoners of conventional lifestyles. Walking away from a lot of that has changed my relationship to time, very much for the better.