I usually do. Whenever I feel the urge to procrastinate or I'm waiting after
a time-intensive task, I find myself opening a new tab and typing "news". The browser auto-completes the rest and I hit Return.<p>I think I get to scan most of the content on HN that way. It's not my objective, but it happens.<p>Does anyone else do that?
Sure, at least a few times a day, switching between new and main.<p>A few years back I measured the times (mapped on a schedule) I spent surfing HN, and the numbers showed it's more like rest than procrastination.<p>At the time I was trying to put a finger on a really difficult workaholism -> exhaustion tendency. I thought I was probably wasting time here, being inefficient, maybe even addicted in some way, but by the numbers it was better described as a recovery function.<p>And like a lot of recovery-related functions, being here is almost never the objective I have in mind. Like you, I mindlessly type it in. Recovery is the objective my body seems to have in mind, and places like this can be really effective means, for example when they generally support my preferred ways of looking at things. A lot of other places do not do that quite as well.<p>(A weird topic by itself, given the echo chamber effect, but as long as you know about it...)
It depends on my mood. The tech scene can be depressing and overwhelming if you browse it with a heavy heart. HN can mirror back your own mood, so if I’m calm and positive, in good spirits and mentally fit to browse this site then I will. If I’m not in the right mood, depressed, heavy heart etc then I avoid it.
I'm temporarily (and I'm very thankfull it's only temporary!) trapped in a situation where I can only see about the distance to my monitor, and not well at that. HN and YouTube are about the only thing that I have to keep me distracted at this point.
Often. I force a break every now and then. HN is the friendliest and smartest social network I know of, but stick around long enough and you see the cracks.
Yep, but I just keep reloading "new", as well as slashdot, alternet, wunderground, coinbase, twatter, urbandead, pardus, nationstates, and butterchat.