“roughly 90 hours a month (~1.5hr/day plus occasional weekend activities)”
My math says that those weekend activities total the 1.5 hours every day has and also 10 additional hours every weekend.
“Any Dragon who leaves during the experiment is responsible for continuing to pay their share of the lease/utilities/house fund, unless and until they have found a replacement person the house considers acceptable, or have found three potential viable replacement candidates and had each one rejected. After six months, should the experiment dissolve, the house will revert to being simply a house, and people will bear the normal responsibility of “keep paying until you’ve found your replacement.” ”
It seems counterproductive to have people who have left the experiment living in the same house until they are replaced. Exit terms such as ‘two months notice, or less if a suitable replacement can be found or otherwise agreed’ are less coercive.
21 hours most weeks is 3 hours per day, or 2 hours during each weekday and ~10 for the weekend.
Just making sure that your daily and weekly estimates don’t contain math errors, not saying anything about the sufficiency of those numbers.
Oh, goodness, you’re actually completely right. I just dumbbrained. The goal is 21 hours per week, on average, but with most weeks having more like 12 hours and some having more like 40.
The numbers are somewhat higher in the beginning both a) because it’s easier to relax expectations than to tighten them, and b) I do suspect we want to frontload the togetherness and do more individual stuff after norming and bonding.
“roughly 90 hours a month (~1.5hr/day plus occasional weekend activities)” My math says that those weekend activities total the 1.5 hours every day has and also 10 additional hours every weekend.
“Any Dragon who leaves during the experiment is responsible for continuing to pay their share of the lease/utilities/house fund, unless and until they have found a replacement person the house considers acceptable, or have found three potential viable replacement candidates and had each one rejected. After six months, should the experiment dissolve, the house will revert to being simply a house, and people will bear the normal responsibility of “keep paying until you’ve found your replacement.” ”
It seems counterproductive to have people who have left the experiment living in the same house until they are replaced. Exit terms such as ‘two months notice, or less if a suitable replacement can be found or otherwise agreed’ are less coercive.
Yeah, your exit norm is more what I was looking for. Thanks for the rework/reword … I’ll update it to something more like that soon.
The actual number we’re shooting for is 30h/week, but not 30 hours every week. More like 20 hours most weeks and 40 or 50 every now and then.
21 hours most weeks is 3 hours per day, or 2 hours during each weekday and ~10 for the weekend. Just making sure that your daily and weekly estimates don’t contain math errors, not saying anything about the sufficiency of those numbers.
Oh, goodness, you’re actually completely right. I just dumbbrained. The goal is 21 hours per week, on average, but with most weeks having more like 12 hours and some having more like 40.
The numbers are somewhat higher in the beginning both a) because it’s easier to relax expectations than to tighten them, and b) I do suspect we want to frontload the togetherness and do more individual stuff after norming and bonding.