Ask HN: Low Effort but Useful Activities

4 points by helloworlddd a day ago

Some activities need little mental effort such as playing certain video games. With practice, you improve at them. The same idea applies to useful skills like typing or solving maths problems, which have practical benefits. What other activities could someone do that are either helpful for an engineer or generally useful and need little thought?

daemonologist a day ago

This isn't quite what you're looking for, but you could label data. It's low effort (usually) and creates something useful, although it doesn't necessarily benefit you personally.

jfil 13 hours ago

Pick up garbage at a local semi-wild area/walking path. Pay attention to nature and how the seasons change, as you pick up garbage. Enter trees and animals you spot into the iNaturalist app.

turtleyacht a day ago

Copy paragraphs from textbooks. Time-consuming but forces one to slow down and think.

Memorization mnemonics. Shuffling through index cards to associate numbers to words. See Mind Performance Hacks (2006) from O'Reilly.

Make notebooks with cheap filler paper, high-capacity stapler, and duct tape. Use G2 pens or archival quality ink.

Make your own index cards: fold in half and then into thirds; cut those into rectangles. (Still on the lookout for good storage.)

Shade paper with crayon. Carpet is smoother than desks. Envelopes are a good way to iterate color combinations. Pick colors at random.

Convert mailed coupons into CSS. You get salable graphic designs and color palette for free.

Break down milk cartons for free cardstock.

Prime cardboard with paint for a cheap canvas.

meristohm a day ago

Processing plant fibers for string/rope/etc. Nettle, yucca (so I've heard), hemp, ... it's a long list but regional.

Humming to find the resonant frequencies of the space you're in.

Observational drawing- paper, pencil, draw what you see (or if not sighted, maybe there's a similar activity?)

Listening to what's happening around you. Originally thinking birdsong, but the lowest barrier is just where you are.

jbjbjbjb 18 hours ago

Meditation, learning keyboard shortcuts, learn an application, planning and organising like GTD, read a book

sejje a day ago

I fly drones in simulators.

The skills apply directly to real-world drones.

  • sloaken 19 hours ago

    Is flying drones a real world possible job?

    • sejje 18 hours ago

      Yes. The jobs I've heard about:

      * Military

      * Police

      * Search and rescue

      * Agriculture

      * Videographer (real estate being common)

      * Surveying

      I just fly for fun.

pavel_lishin a day ago

Exercise.

  • meristohm a day ago

    Walking or bicycling (or whatever mobility mode one can do), on the low-effort end, without sound in ears or eyes on screen; this lets the mind wander and eventually, interesting ideas and syntheses bubble up.

  • helloworlddd a day ago

    That's a good one. I was thinking more along the lines of something low effort that I could do at a desk or on a couch that will still lead me to improving a skill of some sort.

    • solardev 13 hours ago

      Exercise while sitting down. Curls? Tricep pull-downs? If you do a bunch of squats, you could still be sitting half the time but getting fitness xp the other half.