I was talking about this with one of my friends a couple weeks ago and bitching about how I can't find a phone to replace mine that wouldn't be a massive downgrade in terms of what I can do with it. He was joking and said "Maybe you should just get an Iphone" and I was like... at this point maybe I should what difference would it make?
Do you happen to have a good source for learning these? I've looked into it in the past but everything I find about meditation and mindfulness is riddled with nonsense that doesn't make any sense to me.
I manage them mostly by timeline. At any given time I have 15-20 things going I need to get done so whatever is due next gets priority. Unless it's something difficult and I'm having trouble getting my brain to go into gear I will switch tracks and do the next item down that I'm able to knock out quickly. I also try to break larger things into small tasks. So instead of "xxxx deployment". It's schedule XXXX planning meeting with customer, get quote, get PO, document site, and so on. With things getting added as they come up.
I can't really speak to the rest of your comment because nothing I do ever really gives me any kind of lasting good feeling, other than having it off by back if it had been stressing me out. Sometimes that is impetus enough to focus and get something done though.
Receiving a message like that from an employee and responding with anything other than encouragement to do whatever they need to keep themselves safe makes you a colossal piece of shit.
I have that problem and it's still a problem for me but what I've found that sort of works is to keep a to do list of all the shit I need to do. Kind of like a bulet journal but less complicated. If someone asks me to do something then instead of immediately jumping on it (unless it's an emergency) I put it on the list. Then when I am working on something and it stresses me out to the point I am reaching for my phone I move to a different item on the list instead (sometimes). When I finish something or review the list and see a bunch of things crossed off it also gives me a little mood bump. Also keeping my phone in my bag instead of within reach and just listening to podcasts or whatever on my wireless buds helps.
None of this is a perfect solution but it did help a bit. Usually if I can get myself in a groove I can power through several items and make up the time I lost dicking around so having a list ready is handy for that as well.
It's not all my data but I use backblaze for offsite backup. One of the reasons I can't drop Windows. I don't have anywhere I travel often enough to do a physical drop off and when I tried setting a file server up at my parents but they would break shit by fucking with their router every time they had an internet outage or moving it around (despite repeated being told to call me first).
Hyper-V could literally suck my dick all day and I still wouldn't use it if there's a non-microsoft option that works. Not interested in being the test group for any more of their shit or get rug-pulled at the worst moment.
In practice I don't know if I've ever had a relevant short come up when I was trying to find how to do a specific thing. Usually if I need help with something it's more complicated than a short would allow for. I have seen "How to" shorts for all kinds of stuff come across my feed though that were pretty good. So if one came up when I was looking for how to do something I would watch it. That quick, concise format is exactly what I want usually when I'm trying to figure out how to do something. It skips all the "Hi I'm xxxx, welcome to my channel, blah blah blah" shit that the longer videos have. My main point was that not all this content is worthless brainrot stuff. Regardless of if it's useful to you or me in particular someone else may find it valuable.
The fact that they're moving things over slowly instead of just fucking finishing it before they deploy it all at once. They've been doing this since Windows 10 came out, they have a trillion dollars. There's no excuse to have it be half assed for so long especially considering "Settings" isn't even an improvement.
What was easier to find in the control panel than it is in settings?
Literally everything? You don't have to click through 14 different menus to drill down to what you're looking for. It's all on one window in Control Panel. Just look at Devices and Printers in Control Panel vs. Devices in settings or Programs and Features vs. Apps and features the newer versions have far less information available at a glance.
You’ve never actually used windows 11, have you?
I use it every day on my work PC. It runs like ass.
I'm only short pipe gender 😢