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Improving my focus by giving up my big monitor

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Why This Matters

This article highlights how giving up a large monitor can enhance focus and productivity by reducing distractions. It underscores the importance of workspace ergonomics and device setup in optimizing work performance, which is especially relevant as remote work and flexible setups become more common in the tech industry. For consumers, it offers insight into simple yet effective ways to improve concentration and reduce digital clutter.

Key Takeaways

Keeping my focus has been challenging. It’s not a new phenomenon, and I suspect that there are contributing factors that have lead to the unfocused state dominating. For example, I’ve been that guy who wants to be on top of things, to be in the loop, to respond to urgent issues. It feels fantastic to be in that firefighter role as it gives me the feeling of having an impact, but it results in me being drained at the end of the day and often over-caffeinated.

One day I was doing work on my laptop on a couch because hitting 30 apparently means that sleeping slightly incorrectly results in debilitating back pain. During that session, I was working on a larger task and making tons of tiny little changes that needed to be done in order to release a new feature. I was finally in the zone again, and it felt fantastic!

That’s when I decided to start an experiment: can I improve my focus by giving up my big monitor?

Results

I’ve done this type of “experiment” a few times in the past when the power has gone out and my super duper ergonomic setup has become useless. No power, no USB-C dock, no monitor. It wasn’t that fun and my eyes hated reading text off of a laptop screen.

A few things have changed since then:

GNOME has working fractional scaling that you can simply enable in display settings

ThinkPad displays have gotten better, with the picture being quite cromulent, and the 16:10 aspect ratio helps fit more on the screen

the nature of my work has changed and will keep changing in the near future

Almost a month in, I’ve had a pleasant experience with this experiment. I feel more focused. Yeah, that’s it. Am I actually more focused is up for debate, as I’m not sure how to measure it objectively.

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