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Sink or Swim: Managing RSS Feeds with Better Groups
Matt Wood | Nov 27 2007
Besides baseball, coffee, and my music collection, I probably obsess over how I read RSS feeds more than anything. Sometimes it feels like I tinker with the setup more than I actually read the news, but I'm making progress. I won't claim to be completely satisfied with how or why I try to consume so much information from the internet, but lately I've been as content with the process as I can hope. Bailing Out Trying to stay on top of dozens of feeds can feel like trying to squeeze a river through a kitchen strainer. I used to be a NetNewsWire guy, but I switched to Google Reader this summer to simplify switching between multiple computers. At first it exacerbated the feeling that for what little info I could process through that strainer, I might as well just give up and let it flood the place. Unlike more powerful desktop readers like NNW, Google Reader doesn't give you any options to control the refresh rate of feeds, how long they stay in your queue before disappearing, etc. So if I missed a day, or even a few hours without checking in, hundreds of unread items would keep piling up, with no chance of my ever finishing them. So I started marking hundreds of items at a time as read, and sure enough I felt better. It was like dipping a bucket in the river instead of trying to drink the whole thing, and after a few days I realized it was okay to let a few things pass me by. Group Them the Way You Read Them The magic trick for me though, has to do with how I group the feeds in Google Reader. This can be accomplished with any modern news reader, but the Google's does things in a particular way that really hits a sweet spot. When given the option to group things, we tend to do it topically, with labels like "Sports," "Technology," "Blogs," etc. For years, I lumped my feeds into folders like this, thinking it would help me manage them, but all it did was help me ignore just how many I'd subscribed to by tucking them away in folders. I still looked at the growing numbers of unread items and felt that endless sense of dread that I would never finish. Knowing how to cut my losses when I got behind was nice, but it was also making me miss a lot of stuff that I wished I hadn't. I didn't mind skipping through some feeds, like standard news or high-frequency group blogs, but I felt bad missing my friend's weekly update, or that new column from one of my favorite writers. So it dawned on me to group my feeds by the way in which I want to read them, not by topic. If there were some feeds that I didn't mind missing, and some of which I wanted to read every single word, I should organize them that way, not by their putative subject areas. Here's what I came up with:
Again, nothing revolutionary, but it's made my daily information gathering process more manageable, namely because it gives me an easy way out when I've fallen behind. Process Your Pleasure The obvious alternative to all this would be to simply cut the number of feeds I try to follow, and I wholeheartedly agree. Like I said, I have a pretty high threshold for what gets into the club, and keeping things in that Skip 'Em folder makes it easy to identify which ones might be on the chopping block. But this approach gives me the latitude to read broadly in a number of subject areas and still focus on the most important stuff. The fact that I felt compelled to write about this is quite ridiculous, really. I've taken what should be a leisurely activity and turned it into a dull process. But I also realized that I derive a lot of pleasure from reading all these news sites and blogs, and there was no sense in depriving myself. The dull process has kept it enjoyable. 22 Comments
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BingoSubmitted by wood.tang on November 28, 2007 - 3:06pm.
You probably think you were being mean or giving tough love by saying that, but you really hit home. When I say I obsess over this stuff, I don't mean searching for the perfect way to build a haystack. I mean that I wonder what it's all for and why I even try to read all that news in the first place. For me, it's a matter of the identity I try to cultivate for myself. I like to think of myself as an informed person, and in order to be that person, I feel like I need to consume vast quantities of information. But I also recognize that this isn't very healthy behavior, namely because I know I could be an informed, smart person without half of this stuff. But it's where I am right now. This is how I'm controlling it. I wouldn't compare it to the intense mental and physical anguish of substance abuse, but to play with that metaphor for the sake of discussion, I've tried going cold turkey before, dropping RSS and most of the web completely, and I literally had cravings for it, an emotional need to look at that screen. And I've gone the other way too, long benders of reading where I just exhaust myself and swore it off completely. I want to and have cut it down my passive internet use, i.e. browsing, to the bare minimum I need to fuel ideas for my work. I've restricted it so that it doesn't interfere with my "real" life, which believe it or not, still occupies the vast majority of my day. But I don't see the use in arbitrarily cutting myself off when I genuinely enjoy it as a hobby. This post explains my attempts to find a happy medium between gross indulgence and deprivation, to use in moderation, if you will. » POSTED IN:
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