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Tips to effective multitasking


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bhaskar
joingning in sap based bpo
by bhaskar on May 16, 2007 01:07 PM

my qualification is m.com,mba,ca-final one group cleared and 2nd group waiting for results please advice me,my previous experience is in manufacturing (4Yrs)and articleship(3Yrs.) please advice me how can i proceed reply ealy please do the needful,
thank u .
bhaskar
bhaskar_casap@rediffmail.com


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Kamenote Jin
Multitasking
by Kamenote Jin on Sep 22, 2005 05:49 PM

Both the male pattern and female pattern wired brains are capable of multi-tasking and both do it. The difference is that the male pattern wired brain has the two hemispheres less well connected together than the female pattern one; the two hemisphere operate more independantly. Research has shown that male pattern wiring is better at multi-tasking when the two tasks lie in opposite hemispheres. Female pattern wiring is better at multi-tasking when the two tasks lie in the same hemisphere because of the greater connectivity between the two hemispheres. Female pattern brains tend to do less well with split left and right brain tasks because of the greater "interference" between the two halves. Male pattern brains tend to struggle when two tasks lie in the same hemisphere because the tasks compete for attention.

Nota Bene: Throughout I have said "MALE PATTERN" and "FEMALE PATTERN", not "male" and "female". There is a continuum of brain wiring with a distribution that is somewhat aligned with gender but with a large overlap in the middle.

Kamenote Jin



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jyoti
good jobs
by jyoti on Nov 20, 2004 12:25 PM  | Hide replies

i am looking for more better job than this job, At present i am as a account assistant

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sonal
superman
by sonal on Nov 19, 2004 02:01 PM  | Hide replies

it is true that if you can manage time you can manage more than one work..but i think it all comes with experience...and a very supportive family.
everybody lives in different circumstances...everyone has diffent fears...like for me making dinner for 5-6 people was a very big task though it may sound stupid to someone who is good at cooking...but it all comes to you...after 3-4 yrs of cooking you know how will you do it how you can manage with what you have at home and so on.. it is just about not giving up.. a day comes when you do it ina strde without without even thinking about it...first and the formost thing is to plan out what all is to be done in a day...then secondly talk about it someone or the other may comeup with a idea which will click to you.
then dont get nevous about it if you cant make it dont feel guilty about it....better try next time
dont act super man and then die out of stress.



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+aNinDya
RE:superman
by +aNinDya on Nov 14, 2005 08:36 PM
Hi Shiuli,
I did notice the date, but do you still, after a year in Sing feel that
'you' are singled and picked upon, or have started to realize the fact
that Indian expats by-far outclass the local crop?

Lets not get chauvinistic, but I felt pretty much the same when I came
to Sing last Oct, and after a rather good time working in the Silicon
Valley in the US, I was in for a rude shock. However I guess within
weeks I realized the typical Asian reticense to courtesies, the hung
faces in the MRTs and general lack of enthusiasm is rather
Singaporean and hardly directed to you, the foreigner! Yeah we can
talk lots on the 'other' kind of pale skinned foreigners, but essentially
you are more talented than the local lot and thats exactly why you are
here!

Do excuse me, I sermonize a lot :-)
cheers,
+aNinDya

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shiuli
adjusting to a foreign work environment
by shiuli on Oct 29, 2004 04:47 PM

i am working in singapore and am a new comer to the country and to the profession of freight forwarding(shipping).its a challenging job as singapore is one of the busiest ports in the world-so the work never ends!i have no complaints regarding the long work hours and other pressures related to work-but what does one do when your colleagues isolate you and make you feel like an outsider?how is one supposed to feel when one is picked on from time to time for no fault of theirs?can someone please sugggest"adaptation/acclimatization tips?"

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Sanjeev
There is no tip given.
by Sanjeev on Oct 28, 2004 05:32 PM

When you talk about "Tips" in the subject line it should contain some proven and effective "Tips".

There is no tip given in the article. Only views of few of people is published. These views clash among themselve.


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cdr v s nilkanth
multitasking_my opineoun
by cdr v s nilkanth on Oct 28, 2004 04:51 PM  | Hide replies

multitasking is essential in todays fast world where
intence competition exist.multitasking involves multiskilling.the more skills we acquire,whether menor women,we will be benefitedboth individually & organisationaly.

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Vig
RE:multitasking_my opineoun
by Vig on Oct 30, 2004 01:25 PM
If you read carefully my friend, you will observe there was never any promise of any tips. What tips did you expect any way?

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