I think it's combination of: 1) he's really passionate about what he's doing 2) he sees the problem as real challenge 3) he doesn't have corporate structure on his back giving him deadlines and pressure
Is 10 hours really _that_ strange? You are (hopefully) focusing 8 hours "straight" during work _every day_.
If you watch Hotz's streams he takes small breaks to talk with chat and to meme around (just like everyone else during their work days) and he eats lunch and whatever (again just like everyone else).
What I'm trying to say is that Hotz's isn't a superman on Adderall he is just working on stuff he is excited about.
> You are (hopefully) focusing 8 hours "straight" during work _every day_.
I refuse to believe that 8 hours straight focus every day is common.
I have about 4 - 6 hours of really focused, deep work focus available. 6 hours if I am really interested in the project and 4 hours for normal days. The rest is doing low focus work like writing mail, planning ahead, attending workshops, reading up on updates for relevant libraries, reading documentation etc.
When I was around 15 I used to do 10 hours of x86 assembly programming, and then several hours every day after school for a month or so in a row. Parents would have to force me from the computer.
I attribute it to a younger brain, NO internet and NO fun distractions. At 42 I just don't see how I did it, and I know I could never be that focused. Just sitting still for 4 hours make me feel quasy now, and I need to use my physical body in some way.
Yea I miss youth. I'm in my 30s and all nighters are not the same anymore :(. When I was young I'd do 2-3 in a week and with a four hour nap I would recover.
Now after those I lay down and I can't get up for a couple hours with all this aching in my limbs lol.
I'd say 99.9% of the western worlds workforce doesn't focus for 8 hours straight in the work day - its not really eve possible to in a great deal of jobs where there's context switching (meetings etc)