Constant Context Switching May Be Degrading Developer Code Quality
A software developer argues that treating the brain like a CPU running at 100% utilization is counterproductive for code quality. Frequent context switching between tools like Slack, Jira, and IDEs every few minutes prevents deep, focused thinking. The brain's Default Mode Network, which activates during rest, is described as a critical background processor for resolving complex architectural problems. The author notes that many difficult bugs are solved not at the desk but during breaks away from the screen. As a personal experiment, the developer is trialing a one-hour screen-free, input-free period to allow subconscious processing to catch up.
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