Hey Paul, though I'm not drawing from the largest sample size I've computed my DOD with SpaceX to be 2.00, which is telling compared to my 178 average.
Though hundreds of thousands of engineers and 16 countries have participated in the construction of the ISS, only 167 people have ever seen it in person.
This is a great insight. I recognized early on in my career that I could realistically only hold 6 or 7 crisis' in my head at one time. It is why I shied away from management.
Used to work with someone who was a big proponent of 5-7 max layers of abstraction as a design principle. I never researched it, but it seemed to make a lot of sense (he claimed it was documented). So you many not be at all atypical =D.
I don't know, I've worked with folks who thrive on keeping what seems like dozens of threads active at once. Got to work with some at Google and NetApp who were really excellent project managers. It is definitely a talent. I try to get better at it but rely on crutches like my notebooks for swapping out brain state.
"Having a low DOD translates to less on your mind and less mental overhead. Less overhead gives a greater ability to focus and less time spent keeping tabs on and switching among happenings throughout your organization."
I wonder if that applies to the number of opened tabs in browsers. Just thinking of my bad habit of leaving many tabs open :)
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[ 5.0 ms ] story [ 106 ms ] threadThis is a really superb insight on measurable data we all have.
-- Sobering thought. Interesting work.
"Having a low DOD translates to less on your mind and less mental overhead. Less overhead gives a greater ability to focus and less time spent keeping tabs on and switching among happenings throughout your organization."
I wonder if that applies to the number of opened tabs in browsers. Just thinking of my bad habit of leaving many tabs open :)