+
+## Measuring programmer output
+
+There's also a tendency to measure programmer productivity via how many commits the programmer can make to a project. In an era of social coding sites like Github / Gitlab we can easily look at what other coders are committing and feel that we're somehow not measuring up. And unlike certain measurements of old (lines of code, which measures how many lines of code a programmer adds to a program) we can see the quality of their commits to a project. It can be daunting seeing a lot of quality work done by our peers.
+
+This too can be a source of frustration and feelings of inadequacy. "Why can't I be as productive or useful as this other person" we might say to ourselves? Or worse, these metrics may be used by others to judge productivity and we may find ourselves being criticized for our output (or lack thereof).
+
+Unfortunately commits and lines of code are the most visible measurement of coding productivity, but they don't show much about the actual practice of programming. We can't measure to any degree of accuracy the amount of time thinking about the problem. We don't see the mounds of reference material the programmer used in order to figure out a solution. And we certainly don't know just from looking at commits if this is the result of one person's afternoon of work or many days of work (unless they commit more often). We might find that this person is committing the work of multiple folks in their organization with the committer as the focal point for the other contributions.
+
+Measuring ourselves on the quantity of others output is easy and seductive but it isn't useful for figuring out how to improve ourselves in relation to the other programmer (other than "generate more commits". That line of thinking can lea us to thinking that we're not spending enough time doing "actual programming" and lead to overwork, stress, and burn-out.
+
+## Ways to improve (needs better title)
+
+(How to be more mindful about comparing ourselves to others)