I started my professional career working part-time at a small, 10-people telecommunication firm. I was the only software engineer in the company, automating the well-known manual work and reporting directly to the owner. Since then, I have worked at many jobs—including my own start-up company where there were only the founders at the beginning and reporting to our investors and the CEO of the company, which acquired us at the end. My current software job is with an enterprise firm. There was and still is one obvious flaw of all those companies: Multitasking. It is self-evident because I’ve got to experience it first-hand every day. Whenever I attend a meeting, there is always someone doing something on the side while still
Multitasking
Multitasking
I started my professional career working part-time at a small, 10-people telecommunication firm. I was the only software engineer in the company, automating the well-known manual work and reporting directly to the owner. Since then, I have worked at many jobs—including my own start-up company where there were only the founders at the beginning and reporting to our investors and the CEO of the company, which acquired us at the end. My current software job is with an enterprise firm. There was and still is one obvious flaw of all those companies: Multitasking. It is self-evident because I’ve got to experience it first-hand every day. Whenever I attend a meeting, there is always someone doing something on the side while still