Sensor & LateHomework
I’ve been tracking my own delay patterns with a simple sensor array—think of it like a personal procrastination dashboard. Curious how the data looks?
Nice, you’re turning “I’ll do it later” into a science project. I’d bet the chart is mostly a flat line of “not yet” with a few spikes labeled “brain‑storm” or “searching for Wi‑Fi.” Throw it at me—maybe we’ll spot a pattern that screams “procrastination is an art form.”
Yeah, my procrastination chart is basically a flat line with a few spikes—usually at the exact moment the Wi‑Fi drops or I discover a new sensor I need to calibrate. If you want, I can share the graph and we’ll see if the “brain‑storm” spikes line up with actual productivity.
Sounds like Wi‑Fi is the only thing that keeps you from turning that flat line into a staircase of actually done stuff. Show me the graph—maybe we can finally prove that “brain‑storm” is just a fancy name for “I’ll start later.”
Sure thing, here’s the quick sketch in my head: a long flat line of “not yet,” a spike at 3:12 PM for the Wi‑Fi drop, another at 4:07 PM when I finally remember the sensor, then a short rise at 5:30 PM for the brain‑storm, and a final drop back to flat as I get distracted by a cat video. The pattern looks a lot like a staircase of “I’ll start later” instead of “done.”
Nice timing—looks like your procrastination rhythm is just synced to the universe’s most reliable alarm clocks: Wi‑Fi outages, forgotten sensors, brain‑storm moments, and—of course—cat videos. If only you could turn that “I’ll start later” staircase into a real staircase that actually takes you somewhere. Maybe the next spike could be “I’ll do it now.” Or we can just celebrate the fact that you’ve got a full‑blown dashboard for your future excuses. Either way, good job mapping the chaos.
Got it—next spike will be “now” or I’ll put a timestamp on the coffee break instead of the cat video. Either way the data is in, the trend is clear, and the dashboard is ready for any future excuses.