It would be fascinating to line up every book, comic, film, newspaper, article, magazine, internet source and television programme that you wanted to watch and actually see how much time it would take to get through them all. Obviously this would be a counter productive process and would only include those items you knew existed at the time (and of course there are many of the above medium in the years to come that we will want to consume that we don't yet know about). This is a long way round of saying that there is far too much information and entertainment to consume and not enough time. Most of us have full time jobs. We have social lives. We have partners and friends. How the hell do you get through everything?
Those of us out there who don't find it a problem would simply say, it comes down to 'choice'. You simply chose what you want to consume and accept that you will never be able to access everything. Companies like Google make the process easier. They allow you to narrow searches down. But for many that is not enough. The fact that they crave information is too strong - they will spend a lifetime trying to read all of it.
Recently I found that in my daily routine there was probably close to 30 websites that I visited on a regular basis. These comprised my usual favourite topics of gadgets, tech, comics, movies, sport, general news and recruitment/ legal for work. On top of this there were the various apps that I use on both my iPhone and iPad - the likes of Zite and Flipboard - which attempt to break info down in to easy to swallow bites. The point is that in any given day, it isn't possible to really get through that much information and still work and sleep.
In my effort to try and control what I consume and when, I decided to pick a handful of sites that are 'daily' reads. That is a site that updates daily and has enough substantive information to make it worthwhile visiting 5 times a week (I get the weekend off). I have used Google bookmarks for a while now (means you can access your bookmarks from any computer) so I have thousands of favourite sites all categorised. I simply went through the key categories and picked those that would give me the broadest overview - the Guardian and International Herald Tribune for news. Comicbookresources and Aintitcool for geeky stuff. CNET, Mashable and Wired for techy stuff. BBC for sport, twitter trends for well twitter and theotherside which is a nice London-centric site, handy for letting you know things going on in the capital.
One page of bookmarks - accessible on every gadget I own - takes me 20- 30 minutes to get through it and at the end I feel like I have covered everything I need. Add in a quick view of Flipboard and all is good in the world of info-jocking. Of course this doesn't help me catch up with 17 different seasons of my favourite tv shows!
Of course, the other option is to use an aggregator. Try popurls.com. This site pulls anything of importance on the Internet into one page - and breaks it down into categories. You could spend years on this site - it has articles, videos, pictures - everything. It's definitely worth a visit every now and then.
1 comment:
Great post dude. Will try out the aggregators. DVD
Post a Comment