Depends on the day. On days when I'm both not at a consulting site and don't hit flow early in the day, I'll cop to "all of them that I find interesting, and some of the ones that I might not but which had good comments."
Recently, I've ignored all stories that start with the word 'Why', have the word 'myths' in it or gives advice about what I should do in the title since they are almost always linkbait.<p>I wish I understood the motivations behind people posting linkbait, especially when the website being posted has no ads or anything on it. Is it just to gain karma?
This poll should have so many more options.<p>Every day it changes. Some days I'll read only 3 articles all day, but in full.<p>Tomorrow, I'll read about 20% of 5 articles.<p>Last week, maybe I read about 50% of 30 articles.<p>It's based on the content, the timing, the quality of the article, the source, the bias, the topic, etc.
I do this the Slashdot way; I don't read the articles at all. =P<p>(More accurately, I always read the comments here first on any title that looks interesting. If there's a good, heady discussion going, I'll go back and read the article after reading all the comments. If there's < 5 comments, I won't read the article at all.)
Oof, not sure any of the options fit me well enough. Of those that interest me, I probably read about 80% in full, 15% I start reading, but find I'm not actually as interested as I thought, and the last 5% I might just look at the HN comments.<p>I usually (but not always) read the HN comments. Depending on my familiarity with the subject (based on the headline), I may read through the comments before reading the article. But I might not.
It depends on how busy my week is, but I tend to at least start reading everything that is of interest. Sometimes I don't finish them if they don't live up to what I was expecting and for certain stories I just read the comments as I might learn more from that.<p>With my side project (Hacker Newsletter), I tend to also read articles that, while not relevant to me, would be something that my subscriber base would find interesting.
I read it through the RSS feed at<p><a href="http://andrewtrusty.appspot.com/readability/feed?url=http%3A//news.ycombinator.com/rss" rel="nofollow">http://andrewtrusty.appspot.com/readability/feed?url=http%3A...</a><p>which includes the text of the article in the feed. So I read the ones that interest me right then and there, and then open the link to read the comments afterwards.
It obviosuly depends: if it's really interesting to me I read it in full. If it's interesting, but not really so much, then I read the first paragraphs and then skip over the rest. It also depends how the articles are written.<p>I've read EJs blog posts in full for example.
I use Evernote to collect useful and interesting articles and links I see during weekdays to read them on weekend or when I have some free time. And clip to Evernote the full articles that I think will be useful someday.