Wouldn't the analogy then be that you are booked in F1 from 7-10am, and then your non-creative hours and salary are booked designing soup cans for a massive amount of money to bypass the salary limitations of the F1 cost cap?Rodak wrote: ↑07 Aug 2023, 21:16This is true.Sorry for being blunt, but the real world doesn't work like that. People can't just go at 120% at their job in exchange for downtime, especially not if it's a job that requires thinking (for physical labor you might get some benefit). You can't just think at 120% speed. And similarly, trying to work 120% power at a computer isn't gonna be more efficient. Rather, it's more likely to introduce mistakes and you have to spend time finding and correcting those mistakes.
When I was doing cad mechanical design I found my useful creative time was limited to about three hours in the morning and by 10:00 I was done; I used to come in early so I would have time alone, as I found that useful. At that point I would transition to grunt work, reports, etc., as I didn't really accomplish much on the design side after that. A job that requires physical labor, especially repetitive actions, can be extended to longer hours with an increase in production (and boredom), but creative work can't be forced through longer hours.
Who are F1 to argue that you can't be paid 200,000 a year to design soup cans?
There are ways to bypass the salary limitations imo, exactly as described above.