Why multitasking isn't a feature

By 

Tim

 

Metz

 

on 

November 30, 2016

I’m working on a report while keeping an eye on my Twitter stream. I send out a few messages while having dinner with my girlfriend. I’m reading an article on my phone while queuing at Starbucks.

I’m working on a report while keeping an eye on my Twitter stream. I send out a few messages while having dinner with my girlfriend. I’m reading an article on my phone while queuing at Starbucks. I’m watching my favorite sports team on TV while simultaneously hanging out on Facebook using my iPad.

Sounds familiar? Thanks to modern technology, we’ve all become avid “multitaskers.”  We hop from one activity to the other and back again. Perhaps not surprisingly, Apple touts this as a feature of their new OS, and has actually been doing so for a while.

2016: Siri on Mac is all about multitasking

Siri on macOS
macOS multitasking features

2015: iOS 9 includes Split View multitasking

Apple announces split screen

2010: Steve Jobs announces Multitasking on iOS

Steve Jobs announces multitasking

From a marketing perspective, Apple’s choice to tout Multitasking as a main feature is understandable: we all do it, and the more we do it, the better multitaskers we think we are. Who doesn’t want a device and software that can make us even better at that?

Well, me for one, and not because I’m an Apple-hater (on the contrary, I use mainly Apple devices). As with climate change, the opinion on Main Street lags behind on what has already been pretty well settled on University Street.

For well over a decade now, scientific research is crystal-clear: the human brain cannot multitask. Our brains can’t handle two complex tasks at once, and at best, what we end up doing is constantly switching our attention between different activities. This switching costs us dearly: it takes more energy, we are slower, we make more mistakes, we can’t really think. Multitasking isn’t only impossible, it hurts our productivity, the very thing we think we’re improving.

Seeing is believing

Don’t believe me? Try this simple test—here's a video version. It takes less than two minutes:

  1. Take a lined piece of paper, a pen, and a stopwatch.
  2. Start the timer and write on line one: M U L T I T A S K I N G, then on line two: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
  3. Stop the timer and write down the time it took you.
  4. Now start the timer again and write exactly the same on lines three and four, except now after each character you move to the other line, then back again (so you first write on line three “M”, on line four “1”, on line three “U”, on line four “2”, line three L”, line four “3”, etc.).
  5. Stop the timer and write down the time it took you.
  6. Note the difference.

If you’re like the vast majority of people, you were slower the second time through. It also felt more difficult to complete the task and you may have even made some mistakes.

I’ve done this test with groups ranging from busy executives to high school students and the message always clicks immediately: this is what we’re all doing the entire day, with much more complicated tasks than writing down a bunch of letters and digits.

Still not convinced? Check out this simple demo of the results of single versus multitasking (VIDEO).

Back to Mac

While this fact has yet to make its way down Main Street, it’s hard to believe nobody on Infinity Loop in Cupertino (Apple’s HQ) is aware of the research on multitasking. It might be a great marketing move to appeal to the world’s “multitaskers,” but wouldn’t it be much better if Apple built technologies that truly helped us perform better?

Perhaps future versions of MacOS or iOS will include revolutionary new Singletasking features. Until then, you’ll have to rely on Saent Lifeline and self discipline to keep yourself at peak productivity.

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