I frequently have all of my work completed, and I am unfortunately not allowed to work from home. This means I spend a lot of time sitting at my desk scrolling social media, because there’s nothing that needs done. I feel like I’m wasting my time, even more than work already wasted the best hours of the day. How do you fill that downtime with something that is personally valuable, but not disruptive or noticeable enough that you’d get in trouble?

  • octobob@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    I walk around the shop and bullshit with others, maybe clean or organize stuff. Or help build panels if I’m caught up on testing. We’re so busy right now tho those days are kind of long gone. Currently working overtime indefinitely til like 2027 at least.

  • deathmetal27@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    You don’t. I’d ask my lead/supervisor if there is any other item to work on. Doing this consistently will get you promoted.

  • ITGuyLevi@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    I write really dumb powershell scripts. One throws up a GUI with a picture of a wizard holding a magic 8-ball, clicking the 8-ball gives a random response from a list of responses. It was kind of fun figuring out how to store images in the script (just went with base64)…

    Its always a fun way to guess if the meeting with M$ is going to be beneficial or not.

    • Boozilla@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Highly recommend this. (My book is shit, and will never see the light of day, but I had so much fun writing it.)

      • Black Xanthus@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Never think of your writing like that. Remember that both Twilight saga and 50 shades of grey exists as best sellers. Your writing is clearly better than that (just from this post!).

        Consider something like Smashwords, or even sticking it on Amazon for free/cheap. You may not be the next Tolkien, but you worked on the book, let people read it!

      • Talaraine@fedia.io
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        4 days ago

        Haha same, but I had fun and learned a whole lot about the effort that goes into it. Had a newfound respect for everything I read after.

  • Kissaki@feddit.org
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    3 days ago

    I have no downtime like that. Quite the contrary. I have too much work, too many responsibility, and want to fix and improve things that annoy me which adds more.

    I do visit programming.dev, which is a distraction, but tangential in my field of work, sometimes directly useful.

    • JargonWagon@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Same. I work from clock in to clock out and don’t usually even have a second to check for messages on my phone from family.

  • Twongo [she/her]@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    What i do: oomscroll Lemmy, take smoke breaks, do “the little stuff” like organizing documents after your lazy coworkers, take a walk, read books and hop on codeacademy. Still - this freedom gets stale quickly because the most stressful part becomes pretending to look busy

  • Victor@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Would you be able to create even more work for yourself and get paid more for doing it? Like suggesting things to be done, or doing side projects?

    • s3rvant@lemmy.ml
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      4 days ago

      This was me. At first I automated some commonly used spreadsheets and then made some simple web tools to help our team which eventually led to getting to their IT department and now I work from home full time as a developer.

      • Victor@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        From home full time is the dream. I’m at home Thu–Fri.

        But yeah, very good! Showing what you can do will get you ahead and not be bored!

        • Eheran@lemmy.world
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          4 days ago

          Will it get you ahead tho? Or only under very certain conditions? The last times(!) I have seen people going beyond it was essentially treated like that is to be expected. I have never seen that pay off to anyone. But you know what “always” pays off? Showing you boss you are busy. Just making that impression, not necessarily doing much.

          • Victor@lemmy.world
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            3 days ago

            If you are at a company and nobody notices you are doing nothing but “looking busy”, and that doesn’t get you in trouble eventually, you don’t want to be at that company. What the fuck is that, dude. You should be in a place of collaboration where people notice you, and notice if something is off. Otherwise the place is very clearly poorly run. Get out of there.

            • Eheran@lemmy.world
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              3 days ago

              How many bosses are there that genuinely look at how efficient someone was based on objective data instead of going by gut feeling? How to even define efficient or any other metric? Way too complicated.

              • Victor@lemmy.world
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                3 days ago

                The boss doesn’t need to. If you are working with people, and you collaborate and talk about what you’re doing every day, you’ll quickly notice when someone isn’t doing shit. This will bubble up to the relevant manager and boss and they would have a talk with you to mitigate this behavior. No success? You’re out.

                Not complicated in the least, if you have the proper team structure and communication routines. 🤷‍♂️

                • Eheran@lemmy.world
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                  2 days ago

                  What kind of work do you do that it is so easy to see what and how much someone actually does?

                  For me, a new job could be a few hours or several days and I only truly know that when it is done and no further complications can pop up. For someone else doing the same thing, it could be the opposite (easy/fast vs slow/hard). Or it all hinges on one singular idea to solve some issue, so it could literally be a month without real progress and then it is solved within an hour.