It's possible to single task using Round Robin strategy.
Have a list of things you do, go one by one over them. If new task appears add at the loop "gap".
I found that the worst thing is chasing the bunny: Oh wow. This finished. I should chboing oh another agent that's probablboing... - completely unsustainable.
The loop is very similar to old way of things. You just don't pay attention to notifications. Also it's worth grouping loop to minimal że context switching or ease context switching (e.g. task on project a, task on project a+b, task on project b, task on project a+b, etc.)
In order to get to looping part I use self-approval modes for agents. It's slightly uncomfortable but I built own agents with own permission reviewers and they are quite good. These can be used to run agents in the background. And if you do a loop and find agent still spinning - it's a good moment to take a five for yourself.
The deep focus is still there but somewhere else. Usually in coordination and integration.
It's possible to single task using Round Robin strategy.
Have a list of things you do, go one by one over them. If new task appears add at the loop "gap".
I found that the worst thing is chasing the bunny: Oh wow. This finished. I should chboing oh another agent that's probablboing... - completely unsustainable.
The loop is very similar to old way of things. You just don't pay attention to notifications. Also it's worth grouping loop to minimal że context switching or ease context switching (e.g. task on project a, task on project a+b, task on project b, task on project a+b, etc.)
In order to get to looping part I use self-approval modes for agents. It's slightly uncomfortable but I built own agents with own permission reviewers and they are quite good. These can be used to run agents in the background. And if you do a loop and find agent still spinning - it's a good moment to take a five for yourself.
The deep focus is still there but somewhere else. Usually in coordination and integration.