The Myth of "Keeping Up"
Monday, May 1, 2006 at 06:28PM
Rob in Thoughts on life

This post about information overload from Creating Passionate Users (via LifeHacker) is so true. It describes me well.

... it's time to let that go. You're not keeping up. I'm not keeping up. And neither is anyone else. At least not in everything. Sure, you'll find the guy who is absolutely cutting-edge up to date on some technology, software upgrade, language beta, whatever. But when you start feeling inferior about it, just think to yourself, "Yeah, but I bet he thinks Weezer is still a cool new band..."

I am addicted to information, and it is killing me. I throw out far more than I read. I subscribe to tons of stuff just because I don't want to miss anything. Throwing it away doesn't bother me nearly as much as it used to. It's often a relief. What hurts now is deciding what to keep when I attack "the pile."

Not counting the Bible, which is obvious, here's my must-keep list so far:

The guys at Manager Tools recommend Fortune as the best of the major business magazines in terms of management-related content. I recently re-subscribed, and I'm going to see if it makes my must-read list too. My past  impression was that it seemed more focused on investing than anything else.

I should probably let the rest of my subscriptions go... <whimper>... baby steps, baby steps.

A few weeks ago I spent about an hour cleaning up the feeds in my Bloglines account. I subscribe to 180 feeds, but I only read about six regularly. I put these six in a folder called "Daily Reads," and I filed the rest in other folders. They are there if I need them, but now I don't have to stare at them anymore and worry about catching up. The nice thing about RSS is that it never stacks up in your living room!

Article originally appeared on MacKayNet - Rob MacKay (http://www.mackaynet.com/).
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