Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by dogruck 3202 days ago
That's linked to the question of "how many hours can we extract from these human widgets before they revolt?"

It doesn't hold true in times of crisis, such as war. When the US ramped up for WWII, people were happily working around the clock.

And I'm not sure that it applies to the knowledge workers. My own view is that knowledge workers are productive in bursts.

2 comments

People were happily working around the clock, but I'm fairly certain the people breaking Enigma didn't try doing that more than a fair number of hours a day (fuck if I know what it is, but it's not equatable to making bombs or tanks).
That's a great question. I wonder what the working habits of the code breakers and other knowledge workers were like. Anybody know more details?
The US was only in that period from Dec 1941 to Aug 1945, just over 3 1/2 years. Assuming that the build-up years (when "everyone knew" we were going to have a war) were not as intense.
The work didn't stop when the war ended.

Regardless, my point is that when there is a motivating force, people work hard.

Europe isn't going to fall to Hitler if I don't put in extra hours at my job, though.
I don't think most people working at home during WWII were primarily motivated by concern about their allies abroad. Instead, I'd argue the motivations were:

* supporting a friend or family member serving in the military

* capturing a new economic opportunity (government contracts, etc), following the shockingly hard times of the Great Depression

To that point, there are currently millions of people suffering at this moment around the globe. If you were motivated by compassion, you'd probably find a different job and put in long hours.