How Video Calls Fracture Focus

The last couple of days I’ve had back to back video meetings.

And it’s doing my head in!

The constant context switching tires me and gives me a bad head.

Which got me thinking about how things used to be.

Meetings were only ever in person. I’d get a reminder, and go to the kitchen for a cuppa on the way to the meeting room. This created a moment to reset and recover before the meeting started.

The meeting rooms were always away from desks and computers … which meant no alerts, notifications, or messages to distract me.

If I was deep into a problem, meetings gave me what I call ‘the mental bends’ – like the bends divers get if they surface too quickly. Painful (sometimes fatal) for divers, painful for me in a different way – albeit not fatal.

Modern video meetings, despite being video screens with only the face and headphones reducing background noise, seem to have a significantly higher cognitive load.

The video lags behind the speaker just enough to create a noticeable gap between their lips and the sound. A bit like watching a dubbed movie – and once I spot it, it’s another distraction.

I can either see the active speaker or what they’re presenting. The active speaker display also lags behind their voice, so I spend some time looking at the wrong person.

All through the meeting I am battling my brain’s desire to return to it’s state of focus. Fighting my own brain! Trying to stay present in the meeting. All the while there’s the ping-ping-ping of notifications.

And these aren’t even big notifications – just the little red dot on the application in the taskbar that tells me there’s a new message. It calls to me in the meeting.

Yet there are people who don’t just cope, they thrive in these situations.

Hmm. I wonder?

So I’ve started experimenting with a few small changes to see what works.

Can I make the video call full-screen and so hide the little notifications that create so much noise?

Yes! So the screen with faces I can make full-screen. Shared content I cannot. But I can set the taskbar to auto-hide. And I can pin the meetings app so that it is always on top.

That’s a little less noise. Let’s see how that feels.

Hmm. It helps a little for meetings, but is a pain in the arse for calls with other developers when I’m sharing screens. I am going to have to pick the solution that works at the time because there ain’t one size fits all solution.


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