RIP Multitasking?
by Fazia Rizvi
30 January 2008, 3:50 PM
Interesting article in the Atlantic: The Autumn
of the Multitaskers Having just switched jobs to allow me to focus on learning and producing
something meaningful from that learning, I must admit that I'm finding a
new appreciation for being able to focus on one thing at a time. I honestly
feel I've accomplished more writing in the last week than I've been able
to do all last Fall, simply because I've been able to close a door and
focus on one thing at a time. On the other hand, the idea that multitasking has never worked, or that it
never can (and therefore must be some passing fad we have some affinity
for?) seems a bit ... naive. Yes, the information age and the changes it
has wrought in our lives through technology has fragmented our attention
in ways that were not possible before. But tell a mother of two (or heck, just one!) that multitasking can drive
you crazy or impair your thinking, and she'd probably look at you with a,
"No shit, Sherlock" look and say, "And your point is?" There are things in
our lives that require, no, DEMAND, such multi-focused attention. The
article focuses exclusively on the sort of multitasking brought about by
an immersion in technology, and makes no mention of the other kinds of
multitasking we've always done, out of necessity.