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  • project duration tolerance
  • dougw
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Project Duration Tolerance

dougw
dougw 4 months ago

There are lots of motives for doing projects, but lets focus on the satisfaction of completing a project.

Complex projects may yield more satisfaction, but they take longer to complete - when does that tradeoff become untenable?

What is your comfort zone for hobby project duration?

This is a strange poll for me to formulate because I get lots of project ideas, which I write down, and periodically push forward incrementally. It could take years to push all the way to completion and sometimes they never complete. The typical scenario is I get an idea and start thinking through the solution over a couple of weeks, then start collecting components over a few months, then I finally go into a frenzy of detailed design (PCBs) for a week, then I take another couple of months to get around to going into a 2 week frenzy of building and testing. This process doesn't fit well in the poll options above.

It seems like I go through a process where I start without much commitment and gradually build commitment until the scales tip and I fully commit. Most often I won't tackle a project where I cannot complete the detailed design in a week or two, but this would often be sufficient to create a microcontroller PCB with a full set of user interface peripherals and a sensor system plus some actuators all in a 3D printed housing. I find the 3-4 month design challenges on element14 to be just doable within my comfort zone. Project 14s are a little more comfortable.

Does your project duration tolerance correlate to your attention span?

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  • AngelSoto
    AngelSoto 4 months ago

    For me, project duration isn’t really a fixed time window, it’s more about structure and momentum.

    I’m comfortable with projects that span months, even longer, as long as they’re broken into concrete,
    meaningful milestones. What usually kills a project for me isn’t duration itself, but long stretches
    without visible progress or a clear next step.

    I tend to work in phases: exploration, design, implementation, and refinement. Some phases are
    intense and focused, others are quiet or paused while life happens. That doesn’t mean the project is
    dead, it’s just incubating.

    I’ve found that I’m most likely to finish a project when the core design and architecture can be nailed
    down in a relatively short burst. Once that’s solid, coming back to build and iterate feels natural,
    even if weeks or months have passed.

    So yes, there’s probably a correlation with attention span, but more with how attention is managed than
    how long it lasts.

    Give me clarity, ownership, and a sense of direction, and I’ll stay with a project far longer than any arbitrary time limit.

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  • AngelSoto
    AngelSoto 4 months ago

    For me, project duration isn’t really a fixed time window, it’s more about structure and momentum.

    I’m comfortable with projects that span months, even longer, as long as they’re broken into concrete,
    meaningful milestones. What usually kills a project for me isn’t duration itself, but long stretches
    without visible progress or a clear next step.

    I tend to work in phases: exploration, design, implementation, and refinement. Some phases are
    intense and focused, others are quiet or paused while life happens. That doesn’t mean the project is
    dead, it’s just incubating.

    I’ve found that I’m most likely to finish a project when the core design and architecture can be nailed
    down in a relatively short burst. Once that’s solid, coming back to build and iterate feels natural,
    even if weeks or months have passed.

    So yes, there’s probably a correlation with attention span, but more with how attention is managed than
    how long it lasts.

    Give me clarity, ownership, and a sense of direction, and I’ll stay with a project far longer than any arbitrary time limit.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up +1 Vote Down
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    • Cancel
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