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Not-ifications
Merlin Mann | Mar 1 2006
A few things I've learned I don't need to know about the second they happen:
And, yet these are all things that I used to monitor manually via my RSS reader. Refresh all. Refresh all. Refresh all. Refresh all. Refresh all. Madness. The whole purpose of an RSS feed, it seems to me, goes straight to the "trusted system" notion in Getting Things Done -- if I have a reliable way of knowing when something really important changes in my world, then I don't have to think about it when it's not actually changing, right? And, then, for the less than life-threatening deltas ("new kitty photo!"), it's probably even okay to just check in every few days or so (cf: "tickler file"). But, if, out of some bizarre compulsion, I find myself hitting "Refresh" every 5 minutes, then either a) I don't trust the system, or b) I'm deliberately defeating its purpose as a monitoring and notification system. But, in any case, it's no longer a "notification" if I am the one constantly generating the requests -- instead I become like a sad little pigeon, gamely tapping my lever in the hopes that a pellet (or a hug) will fall out. So, yeah, I'm thinking about adding a few feeds back to my reader, but you can bet I'm going to tweak the hell out of the refresh settings. Now that I've been away from it for a few weeks, I have to say: there are an astonishing number of things in the world that I don't need hourly updates about. Daily, weekly, even monthly status reports provide more than enough information about a lot of change. Take a week off, and see if you don't agree. Maybe even ask yourself: "What is it, precisely, that I'm keeping up with?" 27 Comments
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Of all the web addictions...Submitted by Bruno (not verified) on March 2, 2006 - 4:15am.
Of all the web addictions (email, websurfing, etc.), I believe RSS is the worst one. I knew I had to stop when I had more than a hundred feeds in NetNewsWire and every thirty seconds I renewed them, finding something new. It just killed any productivity I had before. Drastic solution: get rid of RSS. I know it is extreme, but since I know myself, I'd rather check things manually whenever I have time to do it. I am not obsessed anymore with keeping up. I know that for some people that is the only solution. Great technology, wrong guy. » POSTED IN:
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