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When used long-term, Crunch Mode slows development and creates more bugs
when compared with 40-hour weeks.
More than a century of studies show that long-term useful worker output is
maximized near a five-day, 40-hour workweek. Productivity drops immediately
upon starting overtime and continues to drop until, at approximately eight
60-hour weeks, the total work done is the same as what would have been done
in eight 40-hour weeks.
In the short term, working over 21 hours continuously is equivalent to
being legally drunk. Longer periods of continuous work drastically reduce
cognitive function and increase the chance of catastrophic error. In both
the short- and long-term, reducing sleep hours as little as one hour
nightly can result in a severe decrease in cognitive ability, sometimes
without workers perceiving the decrease.
www.igda.org/articles/erobinson_crunch.php
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