I tend to look at 5-7 different websites, apps or notifications like 10 times a day. It's email, WhatsApp, hackernews, twitter, news, RSS feed, etc etc. It's sort of non stop. I was curious if anyone else ends up in this daily checkin hell or if you've found a way to summarise it?
-HN many times a day (probably too much to be healthy as it’s my default “I’ve got 60 seconds to spare”)
-Reddit used to be many times a day but since they turned off compact mode on mobile it’s maybe once a day using old.Reddit.com on my phone and really not like how I have to zoom to read stuff
-gmail as workflow for personal chores and work GitHub/GitLab, maybe 5 times a day
-discord once or twice a day to catch up with friends (this replaced old WhatsApp and Facebook messenger groups going back many years and there was a switch maybe 5 years when everyone stopped commenting on stuff publicly and moved to private rooms)
-I used to use reader and Feedly to bring everything into RSS but don’t have a replacement for it but have a lazy longing to recreate and test out different things. So I’m missing out on specific blogs and might check them every few weeks. I think this is a gap but things do come through to HN.
Fun: comics, pictures, APOD, some hobby reddit threads (fun fact: reddit presents pretty much anything including search queries as RSS if you append .rss)
Journals: professional journals in my field
Local: Neighborhood blogs, local news, utility company blog, local police crime notes, weather blogs, etc. (all have RSS feeds)
Industry: industry news from various podcasts, institutional blogs, regulator blogs, other subreddits reddits
Global news: RSS feeds from my local big city newspaper
Software news: Cloudflare status reports, release note blogs from my favorite softwares
Work: rss feeds from github on some work repos.
Then I come to HN and Twitter directly as well... (shame)
If you are still trying to "summarize" and consume more faster and better and be on top, personally I believe, you are on the wrong quest. There are too many advices on the Internet already but ask yourself the right question first. Once you have some clarify, the answers are pretty simple.
There will always be someone/something better, faster, prettier, cuter, bigger/nicer car, better/nicer/more house, spouse/partner - ask yourself where you want to stop and reduce to a very few tiny sets of focus.
I think I'm being cheesy and philosophical and I'm not good with it but I hope you get the gist of what where I'm trying to point.
I have stopped "Catching up" quite a while back, ever since I kinda started realizing that I don't have to be amongst the first to know. I wrote about it in 2014 and also have directed many a people who came to me asking -- https://brajeshwar.com/2014/missing-step-productivity-activi...
All the rest including WhatsApp has notifications disabled. Phone is on DnD most of the time.
I occasionally check HN Frontpage,a local news website and a few selected subreddits and that's about it.
LEISURE TIME
1. WSJ: the OpEd section is neocon trash, but the journalistic content is well sourced, objective, and interesting.
2. NYTimes: probably the highest quality journalism in the English-speaking world.
3. Economist: slower news cycle, more deeply analytical and intellectual than WSJ or NYT.
4. Bloomberg: nice in-depth stories about things WSJ would not put on their front page. Good data journalism.
5. YouTube: Lex Fridman interviews, machine learning channels, Minecraft hardcore play throughs, and whatever else the algorithm brings me.
6. Podcasts: Economist Intelligence, CBC The World At Six, PBS News Hour, Bloomberg Odd Lots, NYT The Daily, This Week in Virology, Practical AI, Last Week in AI (this is new to me and good)
WORK
1. Slack: managing my team and also connecting with a couple of industry groups.
2. Email: it pours in all day. I have a lot of Gmail filters and some custom scripting to automate things.
3. I’m working on automating every manual process in my job as CEO, even though it’s painful. The investment will be worthwhile.
Recently stumbled upon https://github.com/piqoni/matcha which is a Go RSS reader with a GPT-3 option for summarizing certain RSS feeds.
Seriously now, I read HN via RSS. I used to get some Twitter stuff via RSS, but now just moved to Mastodon, tagged everyone I care about in a list, and trivially generated an RSS feed out of that.
I have _long_ been looking for a way to summarize trending topics (and ChatGPT ain’t it, since it gets confused with a few hundred items), but right now I just check my feeds once a day (or so) and rely on iOS notification summaries (three a day) to keep tabs on personal chatter.
If you’re overwhelmed by notifications and multiple sites, you’re paying attention to too much noise. Just cut down and move on.
- HN for what's interesting - Reuters (domestic) for what's news - Email for what's personal
I very rarely post. I'm pretty happy with this info diet.
Google News
Guardian
Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
New York Times
Charlottesville Daily Progress
Core77
SwissMiss
NEW SAVANNA https://new-savanna.blogspot.com/
Kottke
reddit interesting as fuck
I tweet about 10x/day but never look at my tweetstream of peeps I follow: it's write-only for me
I post to HN about 10x/day and look at the front page 3-5 times/day
I post YouTube videos (Shorts, almost always featuring my cat) about 5-10/day but never watch others' YouTube videos
I post to my blog 3-5 times/day (since 2004)
I check email (and reply promptly) 2-3x/day
I have no RSS feed
I have 0 notifications on any/all devices
I average an hour/day reading a dead tree version of a book
- BBC News
- Ars Tech
- HN
- (local newspaper for my area)
I don't really checkin - more just click on the dropdown to see if there is anything interesting randomly throughout the day.
My wife looks at a lot of news sites, so I figure she will fill me in on anything else - I have breaking news alerts on for BBC on my phone, but I've found recently it's more just standard news than "breaking"
The only notifications I have on for my phone are BBC breaking news and whatsapp. (And Teams during work hours). Everything else can wait until I want to look.
I still go on Reddit and HN throughout the day, but it's cut down a bit since I have these digests to review at designated times (for me it's 7am and 3pm). It's made a big difference to convert 'active' scrolling with 'passive' review of something in my inbox with a finite amount of links.
It’s not perfect but a scan of YouTube catches me up.
Daily political news each AM: Heather Cox Richardson (via Facebook) for historical context, and https://www.electoral-vote.com for tactical analysis.
And I'll scan my RSS feeds.
Once I get "to work" (I'm still mostly remote) if nothing's on fire I scan HN and open a bunch of tabs that I'll work through in idle moments during the day.
At or after lunch I'll check nytimes.com to see if anything really big happened in the real world.
Late in the day I'll usually check nymag.com for gossipy pop culture and local NYC news and reviews, and TV recaps.
Work is mostly the same except we use Slack instead of Discord. My work inbox is mostly useless with the number of internal lists I'm on, but I make an effort to scan that for stuff that I might actually need to read or respond to. Then I respond to any red pips in Slack -- I'm in enough channels and threads that I just have to leave most channels "white" most of the time, and the "Unreads" and the "Threads" views are mostly useless.
For life it's: HN, reddit, WSJ, NYTimes
It does help to pause the loop for as long as possible though. I think the frequency of checking increases linearly with anxiety.
The performance of the classifier is limited by the fickleness of my judgements, I am thinking about making it into a bookmark manager, an image classifier, something that can sort through 5000 search results, and a workflow engine.
It's not perfect, but at least I thought reopen 5 websites like 50 times a day.
I rebranded it as a social listening platform a couple months ago, but one can still use it for its initial purpose. Let me know if you find this useful, can grant free access.
I have an RSS feed that captures hackernews posts that make it to the front page, a couple RSS feeds to some YouTube channels that I follow (I don't have a YouTube account) and an RSS feed to some specific niche subreddits.
Finally, I have a personal libreddit instance that I use to browse the "front page" of Reddit (without an account) to see if there's any news that I might have missed.
I look at Inoreader to catch up on my RSS feeds during the week and I will star items I'd like to read more about later. If I'm lucky I get to look at the starred items once a week. Almost everything I'm interested in has an RSS feed. Hackernews goes into the feed reader as well.
I keep my personal email open and glance at it a few times a day to make sure there's nothing super important. I also clean up my email about once a week.
Other than that HN, Reddit, and recently Artifact. Though Artifact's algorithm encourages doom scrolling.
https://apps.apple.com/us/app/quill-news-digest/id1669557131
- Reddit via libreddit.nl
- But for the last few days it has been almost only Bluesky because it’s new and fresh
I don’t have notifications enabled, so just check whenever I feel like it, but without the goal to catch-up necessarily. That’s too much pressure for me, I become too anxious.
RSS feeds didn’t work for me, I tried multiple time over the past 15 years but find myself accumulating links without reading. It’s often too much of an effort, so I just ignore.
Over time, I started to remove subreddits that are no longer relevant to me (e.g. location I moved away from). Nowadays, typically spend 30 minutes or so reading news and discussions.
-Gmail, For work ofc -Youtube, Some Creators come out with videos daily -TikTok, Not usually but sometimes I will check on the app - And lastly i check on discord for any of my work colleagues trying to message me
- Reddit probably once a day before going to bed (should kill it really)
- Whatsapp 2-3 times during work hours, turn notifications on after
- Slack / Email during work hours once every 30 minutes or so
- Deleted twitter the moment it got sold.. so that one is gone
- HN Best, so it's only 2-3 new items a day: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35682630
- Kottke.org
- Daringfireball
WhatsApp creates silent notifications free of vibration and popups for chats with individuals. Nothing for group chats.
Social media apps (like Instagram and Twitter) have 5 min/day timers.
From the top of my head: HN, Twitter, imgur, LI, WhatsApp.
All via web, no apps, no notfications.
I tried blocking most of the sites via /etc/hosts but what is a sudo password against my FOMO...
Self-hosted RSS Feed that broadcasts to my personal Telegram channel (MyNews). One and only source of "news" I consume.
Work days this includes Github, Slack, Asana.
Not daily but a few times a week: E-mail, RSS, Discord
Rarely: Voicemails
- I have a scraper that emails me new headlines regularly for subreddits and a handful of websites.
RSS, HN throughout the day
Reddit is a distraction for me
I’ll lurk on Twitter later in the day, but not engage
Podcasts (Daily or as often as they come out, while exercising): NPR News Now, Risky Business, WSJ Minute Briefing, The Dallas Morning News, Cyber Security headlines, Politico Playbook, SANS Internet Stormcenter, AWS Morning Brief. Podcasts (Occasional): Economist Intelligence, Control Loop (OT cybersecurity), FT News Briefing, Ones and Tooze, lots of others on road trips.
YouTube is for entertainment.
- Discord (mostly a single server)
- a video game website
- a car website
- HN (weekdays)
- 3 emails (not including work)
Less common:
- Facebook/Messenger
www.spronket.com
I browse HN/lobste.rs, twitter lists, dev blogs, newspapers, everything via RSS feeds.