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throwaway192874 | 4 years ago

Legitimate question, is there enough interesting information in this book worth reading if you already agree with the premise, that in complex situations checklists can be good?

I've known about it for awhile and this review does a good job at providing a real-world example of where it's useful, so other than ideas of how to make good checklists I'm not sure if actually reading it is something I should do

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circuit8|4 years ago

It completely changed the way I work. I'm now a checklist making machine and I find it helps so much, not only with clearly defining what I'm aiming to do, but also with motivation, as each checkbox is a very small bitesize chunk that always seems manageable. I recommend giving it a shot. It's really short aswell so you could smash it out in an afternoon.

mikestew|4 years ago

If you have the means to "waste" money on the price of the book, I'd recommend it. But by "waste", I mean that the book could have been a thick pamphlet, but publishers sell books and not pamphlets, so by golly that essay is going to get the shit fluffed out of it until it is book-length. So you're paying for a lot of marshmallow cream.

That said, the premise is good and you might glean some good practices that you'll put to use. It's just that it's not worth the $15, IMO. If you have disposable income, buy it. Otherwise, just go read the New Yorker article referenced elsewhere in this thread.