Calendar Coordination β and the Cognitive Friction Nobody Mentions
Cognitive Ergonomics & Logistics
Calendar Coordination & The Cognitive Friction Nobody Mentions
Why your 30-minute global sync is actually a 14-minute meeting in disguise.
Elias spends his mornings in a workshop that smells of cedar and stale oil, hunched over the skeletal remains of an 18th-century escapement clock. He is a man who understands that time is not a concept, but a physical tension held between gears that must be cleaned with a badger-hair brush.
He obsesses over the pitch of the teeth; he listens for the microscopic stutter of a worn pivot; he recalibrates the weight of the pendulum to account for the humidity of a Tuesday in Antwerp. Elias knows that you can set the hands to any hour you wish, but if the internal friction of the mechanism is too high, the clock is merely an expensive piece of furniture lying to the room. He once told me that most people look at a clock to see what time it is, but he looks at it to see if the time is actually happening.
The Conspiracy Against the Body
I am thinking about Elias today because I just stubbed my toe on a mahogany coffee table that has no business being in my living room. The pain is a sharp, jagged reminder that design is often a conspiracy against the body. As a dark pattern researcher, I spend my life documenting how interfaces trick
