Thirteenth law of worker entropy: Difference between revisions
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{{a|work|}}{{Thirteenth law of worker entropy}} | {{a|work|}}{{Thirteenth law of worker entropy}} | ||
The JC developed this over a series of papers with sometime collaborator, poet, playwright and tropical disease victim Otto {{buchstein}} when trying to understand how Medium Term Note documentation could be so dreary despite the underlying product being basically simple. | |||
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*[[Laws of worker entropy]] | *[[Laws of worker entropy]] | ||
{{C|Laws of worker entropy}} | {{C|Laws of worker entropy}} |
Revision as of 20:18, 21 June 2022
Office anthropology™
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The JC’s thirteenth law of worker entropy (also known as the “optimal complication theorem”): Over time, a given template will tend to a point of “optimal” complication, (c), which is a function of:
- (i) the highest plausibly chargeable fraction of the typical value, (vf), of contracts concluded on the template,
- (ii) the time, (t), required to manipulate the template so it reliably works to the satisfaction of one having the patience, skill and hubris to understand it, and
- (iii) the professional charge-out rate, (r), of such an unusually abled person.
The relationship between c, vf, t and r is as follows: c ↔ vf = tr.
The JC developed this over a series of papers with sometime collaborator, poet, playwright and tropical disease victim Otto Büchstein when trying to understand how Medium Term Note documentation could be so dreary despite the underlying product being basically simple.