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Treat your to-read pile like a river, not a bucket

404 点作者 pps大约 2 年前

47 条评论

karaterobot大约 2 年前
I have an English Lit degree, and the following advice from a professor almost made it worthwhile: &quot;if you&#x27;re reading for pleasure, and it&#x27;s not pleasurable, put the book down. Give the author 50 pages, and if they haven&#x27;t made it worth your time, move on to the next book.&quot;<p>I share this advice with everybody, but almost nobody takes it as far as I know. There&#x27;s way too much guilt and shame surrounding reading: &quot;if I pick it up, <i>by GOD I will finish it, even if it takes a year and I hate every second of it</i>&quot;. It shouldn&#x27;t be that way.
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bueno大约 2 年前
I’m the developer of an iOS and iPadOS app that I think is relevant here. My app Ephemera is a simple read-later application that places expiration dates on every link you add. If you don’t read the article in time, it disappears forever.<p>The app isn’t for everyone, but if you are buried under the torrent of information you “think” you should read, I have found that Ephemera helps me focus and actually read more.<p>You can find the app here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;deadpan.io&#x2F;ephemera&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;deadpan.io&#x2F;ephemera&#x2F;</a><p>I’d love for Hacker News to check it out!
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khalilravanna大约 2 年前
I had this problem but with videogames. What I ended up doing was making a giant spreadsheet in Airtable with every game I&#x27;ve ever played and ever want to play. I have a nice little &quot;What To Play Next&quot; grid of images that I&#x27;m constantly tinkering with the order of as my fancy gravitates towards one genre or another. E.g. If I finish a long JRPG I&#x27;ll probably filter on games of a shorter length or a Shooter for a palette cleanse and move that higher up in the list.<p>The important parts for me were:<p>* Don&#x27;t assume you&#x27;ll play everything or stress about &quot;missing&quot; games<p>* Easy visibility into what I&#x27;m currently playing, what I liked in the past, and what I&#x27;ve been thinking about playing next<p>* Try not to play more than 2 games concurrently. Then I end up never finishing anything, I appreciate the games I play less, and then I have less fun playing games overall.<p>Bonus points with this approach: Since I <i>always</i> have something I&#x27;m excited to play next, I&#x27;m never in a rush to buy games new. I actually save a fair amount of money because I&#x27;m almost always playing games a couple years old and on sale for 50%+ off.<p>This approach has been so successful and enjoyable for me I even thought about spinning this off into a product online but figured my weird OCD approach maybe isn&#x27;t that generally applicable to other. Plus you can just create your own Airtable tailored to your own needs.<p>EDIT<p>If anyone wants to make their own list and wants some data to start, here&#x27;s ~1000 games to start with my data with some of the more personal columns pruned out: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.dropbox.com&#x2F;s&#x2F;guc3tjefoyeyfvr&#x2F;Games-Library-2023-03-29.csv?dl=0" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.dropbox.com&#x2F;s&#x2F;guc3tjefoyeyfvr&#x2F;Games-Library-2023...</a><p>Most of the columns are self-explanatory. IGDB = is a games database run by Twitch (<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.igdb.com&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.igdb.com&#x2F;</a>). I use the ID as basically a foreign key to their table and then I have scripts that query stuff in there like their critic&#x27;s rating and release date programmatically.<p>Also if anyone knows of any other public data sets of video games and video game metadata please let me know!
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lumb63大约 2 年前
That was an awful lot of words to say “read what you can”.<p>I used to worry about adding items to my “want to read” list faster than I could read them. I realized that this is preferable to the opposite - having nothing to read. As long as I’m alive and want to read, I’ll be reading something. Having read all the books I want to is not my objective; enjoying reading books is. So, no need to worry about not having enough time to read all I want to.<p>I now treat my list as a pre-filtered pool of books that span various topics. There is no prioritization associated with them. I find it best to read next whichever book seems most relevant to my interests at the time, which I can’t anticipate in advance.<p>The other day my girlfriend sent me an article about microscopic gears in the legs of an insect and so I decided to read a book off my list about intelligent design. My prior read was about cardiovascular disease because I read an article about cholesterol on the internet. The one prior to that was about gender disparities, simply because I felt like it fit my frame of mind at the time.<p>There is no need to make the matter complicated: read what you want to read, when you want to read it.
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4pkjai大约 2 年前
You the reader, should treat this article like a river and read only the second last paragraph.
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avg_dev大约 2 年前
Never heard of this person before but was pleasantly surprised by the content.<p>In my own life, I have spent decades plagued by the feeling that I wasn’t doing enough, and I had many varied areas of focus and felt like I didn’t really progress on anything. That in itself (the feeling of lack of progress) was I think kind of misleading, as I did progress on some things (though I clearly regressed on some things as well).<p>I don’t really know how it happened but I have made some significant shifts in my life. I started to become physically active again, I stopped smoking cigarettes and some other unhealthy habits, I started really developing and digging into some of my active and creative passions like writing, playing a musical instrument, and renewing my focus on coding to an end and with purpose and quality in mind.<p>Somehow I started finding that I had much more energy and time available for everything. And as opportunities arose I began to seize them. It was a very exciting period for me. Eventually, my plate really became too full, and things began to suffer (mostly me) and I started to say no to things, and continue to keep my focus on what I really think is important. I feel that it has taught me about the interconnected nature of my life, and about how to value my time, how to slow down and appreciate something, how to deal with my emotions head on instead of taking years or decades to process events in my life (I am sure there have and will be many exceptions to what I have said), how to actively take stock of my current situation and change my plans as needed, how to deal with the fact that my expectations for things very rarely match up with reality, how to stop being an intellectual purist and idealist while still deeply valuing a good idea and pursuing my ideals. I look back at how much I have accomplished the last year and I can’t help thinking everything came from stopping trying to do everything and accomplishing nothing (or so it felt), and by embracing what really mattered to me when it was in front of me. I learned to float down the river, I guess. Lazily most of the time. But when I feel it is necessary, I can exert more power in changing my trajectory than ever I could before.
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jyscao大约 2 年前
I think most people end up doing what he&#x27;s suggesting anyway, out of necessity. I suppose his key insight is to just stop feeling guilty about not being able to get through it all.
petecooper大约 2 年前
I&#x27;m mildly disgusted (and entirely unsurprised) with myself that I just added this to a reading list for later.
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throw0101b大约 2 年前
My local library has a limit of having 100 books on hold (which I hit during 2020 lockdowns when there were closed for a while). My current hold list is ~60, and the system allows you to put &#x27;pause&#x27; a hold until a certain day so that they don&#x27;t all arrive at once: so I have holds going out to July.<p>By the system also has a &quot;saved&quot; books feature where it allows you to simply bookmark stuff of interest (and categorize&#x2F;tag them) but not ask the library to deliver them. My saved list is ~1200. I don&#x27;t expect to actually get to them, but I have options for my next item.<p>(I long ago gave up buying books (except in very rare cases) just because I don&#x27;t have space.)
acomjean大约 2 年前
In my younger years I subscribed to the New Yorker and the Economist. Both full of interesting stuff, but a torrent. I had to unsubscribe as I kept on thinking, I&#x27;ll finish that one later, but never did before the next one arrived. Great magazines for a flight, where time seems boundless, and you were connection-less, before the internet found its way onto airplanes.<p>You have to filter. Music, youtube, book content is created faster than you can consume in your limited time on this planet. I read mainly for information, and try spend more time with friends&#x2F; hobbies. Still catch some TV, but I try to limit.
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uoaei大约 2 年前
The best tip I&#x27;ve heard is similar to that in the article, and is basically a mandate to acknowledge and consciously reject the sunk cost fallacy.<p>In simple words, don&#x27;t be afraid to put down a book before you&#x27;ve finished it if it hasn&#x27;t seized you in the first pages.
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candyman大约 2 年前
To give him credit I have to cite Dave Weiner who for me created the concept of of online information being a &quot;river&quot; which means you can watch it go by and not feel guilty about it. You pick out what you find interesting or important and let the rest go. I&#x27;ve never thought of &quot;zero inbox&quot; as something worth striving for. Just let it go...
Tempest1981大约 2 年前
For me, it&#x27;s much more rewarding to find those &quot;needles&quot; and add them to my reading list -- than to actually read them. I.e. the dopamine hit of finding something new&#x2F;interesting -- that&#x27;s the thrill.<p>I guess I&#x27;m ok with that -- it&#x27;s hard to force myself to process items from the river. Any tips on that?
sakisv大约 2 年前
The lede is buried near the end:<p>&gt; To return to information overload: this means treating your &quot;to read&quot; pile like a river (a stream that flows past you, and from which you pluck a few choice items, here and there) instead of a bucket (which demands that you empty it). After all, you presumably don&#x27;t feel overwhelmed by all the unread books in the British Library – and not because there aren&#x27;t an overwhelming number of them, but because it never occurred to you that it might be your job to get through them all.<p>I find the analogy with the British library spot on, and very liberating.
labrador大约 2 年前
Something that helped me was to develop my &quot;discernment&quot; of &quot;quality&quot; so I could quickly reject material that appeared interesting but actually was of little use to me. This is going to be different for each person, but I think it&#x27;s worth putting some thought into because I had previously assumed I had developed a natural talent for it when actually I was consuming content out of habit.
vuciv1大约 2 年前
One way I&#x27;ve been managing this is by reading summaries of certain books. While it can be difficult to decide which books deserve a full read, this approach has significantly reduced the stress I feel about my ever-growing &quot;to-read&quot; pile. By focusing on the most important ideas and insights, I can still learn and grow without feeling the pressure to read every single book on my list.
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HPsquared大约 2 年前
My to-do list is not a big truck! It&#x27;s not something you just dump something on... It&#x27;s a series of tubes!
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hekec大约 2 年前
I developed a simple read-later app called Readstack to tackle this problem. The idea is that it forces you to go through pages one-by-one, without postponing. So, if you want to read something, you will have one item on the top of the list, and you need to read it or remove it before you can go to the following items. It helped me reduce my read-later pule to zero.<p>You can find it here: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;apps.apple.com&#x2F;nl&#x2F;app&#x2F;readstack-read-later&#x2F;id1558413561?l=en" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;apps.apple.com&#x2F;nl&#x2F;app&#x2F;readstack-read-later&#x2F;id1558413...</a>
dimitrios1大约 2 年前
I ended up treating my bookcase full of all my unread books I originally planned to work through like this. In this case my bookcase is the bucket, and I carve a stream or a river out of it. It&#x27;s like a two step filtering process.<p>It just probably would have been cheaper for me to just bought the ones I actually would read. But sometimes you can&#x27;t escape the fantasy of you being some higher intellectual who will one day work through all of these books. I realize now that I probably will never make it through that Modern Algebra text, Operating Systems, or the complete collection of William Shakespear by the Royal Shakespear company -- so I humor myself while being realistic about the progress I can make.
npunt大约 2 年前
I organize my Obsidian around this concept, separating out different streams for different domains of content I&#x27;m interested in. Social, AI, Antilibrary, Wisdom, generic Inbox, and my own Passing Thoughts and Story Prompts.<p>I treat each of these streams as an input to growing my understanding &amp; thinking in these domains, much like a stream of water nourishes plants around it. It&#x27;s a big unlock to do things this way, because it treats inputs as opportunities not tasks. Different streams flow at different rates based on where my initial interests lie and based on interesting things happening in the world.<p>Sort of biomimicry in action in the intellectual realm
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sacnoradhq大约 2 年前
I need sandbags because the bookshelf dam is bursting through the overflow gates.<p>No, really, I have stopped buying books because I&#x27;ve ran out of room.<p>I guess I&#x27;m going to have to sell and give away some to make room for new ones. )&#x27;:
criddell大约 2 年前
I think the new AI tools are going to help me a great deal. There are books that I know I’m not going to read but I’d still like the Cliffs Notes distillation. I think an AI that understands my areas of interest could create personalized summaries of those books.<p>I’m also looking forward to seeing if the new AIs work as better recommendation engines. Again, once the AI gets to know me, I’d love to be able to ask “I want to learn how to sew a messenger-type bag. Where do I start?” Hopefully I’d get back a list of books, videos, and local craftspeople. (And I actually do want to learn that…)
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jh00ker大约 2 年前
Bookmarked this for later! The headline looks REALLY interesting!
par大约 2 年前
I had read some books on kindle here and there over the years,but recently switched over to full time on the kindle. And I must say, there is a distinct pleasure in carrying multiple books with me, and switching between them at will. I have been trying to replace bouncing around apps on my phone with bouncing around books on my kindle and it&#x27;s been very enjoyable. Reduces pressure to finish any single book, and a lot more freedom to bounce around!
CrypticShift大约 2 年前
I think LLMs could definitely help us stop treating large piles as &quot;lists&quot; (to be completed). You can just &quot;dialogue&quot; with it through Chat. And if the AI has access to your recent activities or notes, it can even give you relevant choices. Or you can &quot;navigate&quot; through it in an interactive 2D&#x2F;3D map that clusters the article&#x2F;books by (semantic) similarity.<p>So dialogue and navigation take the place of checking a list.
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bluGill大约 2 年前
My todo list is the same way. I expect to finish everything currently one it somewhere around my 3000th birthday. I just prioritize what needs to be done now, and then what I can do know that feels interesting at the moment. The rest I&#x27;ll do latter<p>Note that there is nothing on the list about expanding human lifespan. There are some things that get priority around exercise and eating good food, but that is as close as it gets.
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longnguyen大约 2 年前
An interesting read! I sorta solved this with my little SaaS[0]. I send interesting articles and RSS feeds to my Kindle, and I read some of them every evening before bed time.<p>Articles never stayed in a “bucket” but they flow every day.<p>Not worth reading, ignore it. And I can always find them later if needed (hint: it will never be)<p>If you read a lot of online content, give it a try<p>[0]: <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ktool.io" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;ktool.io</a>
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mxuribe大约 2 年前
I enjoyed reading this, but was left with the same feeling that i had at the end of the 1983 film WarGames, namely: &quot;...the only winning move is not to play...&quot; I acknowledge this post is not exactly saying that...but it still feels a little flattening to arrive at that point. (With all apologies and respect to the author, i&#x27;m referring to my feelings on the suggestions, that&#x27;s all.)
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examplary_cable大约 2 年前
As a loyal cultist, I&#x27;ll drop here one of the most transformative &quot;educational&quot; or reading technique I have even encoutered: Incremental Reading[0].<p>I would recommend it to anyone to give it a try, it absolutely changed how I study.<p>[0] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;supermemo.guru&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Incremental_reading" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;supermemo.guru&#x2F;wiki&#x2F;Incremental_reading</a>
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gspencley大约 2 年前
&gt; After all, you presumably don&#x27;t feel overwhelmed by all the unread books in the British Library<p>This article was clearly NOT written for me :(
everydayentropy大约 2 年前
If it takes writers as long as this article&#x27;s author to get to the point, no wonder we have reading buckets&#x2F;backlogs&#x2F;rivers&#x2F;whatever.<p>People optimize for search engines, not brevity and therein lies the problem.<p>Be concise and communicate your idea. That should be the North Star of writers.
a_c大约 2 年前
So is your product backlog. Most of them doesn&#x27;t matter. Throw them away and rethink what matter most at the very moment.<p>It is hard to do if you are continuously &quot;sprinting&quot;. Or it doesn&#x27;t matter if you outsourced the thinking of &quot;what matters&quot; to someone else.
nasir大约 2 年前
Just added this to my to read list!
prepend大约 2 年前
I think in this analogy, I am the river and books to read are rocks along the bed. I flow over all the rocks and glean some information worn off the rocks.<p>So I can work on selecting what kind of rocks go into my path that I flow over.
shever73大约 2 年前
I agree with the concept, but I tend to view my to-read pile more like a sushi conveyor than a river. Assuming I&#x27;m still interested later in what I have to read, then it can come round again.
ElijahLynn大约 2 年前
GPT3 Summary:<p>The article discusses the issue of having too many things to read, listen to, or watch, and how it can be overwhelming. The author argues that the problem is not a lack of filtering technology, but rather too much information that we actually care about. They suggest that instead of trying to reduce the size of the to-read&#x2F;listen&#x2F;watch pile, we should treat it like a river, and pick a few choice items from it, rather than trying to empty the whole pile. The article also emphasizes the need to make tough choices about what matters most in life, and accept that we cannot do everything.
petarb大约 2 年前
As someone wanting to read lots of books and articles, this really resonates with me. Not having to read everything but picking and choosing a few here and there
greenspam大约 2 年前
Nice article. I just put it to my to-read list.
synergy20大约 2 年前
I have too many good books queued for never-reading-before-i-die, but it makes me feel good, and feel phony knowledgeable.
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adultSwim大约 2 年前
This book sounds good. I&#x27;ll add it to the list.
switowski大约 2 年前
Sounds useful, I will read it later!
dredmorbius大约 2 年前
First: there&#x27;s a hell of a lot of wisdom about reading and how to approach it in Mortimer Adler&#x27;s <i>How To Read a Book</i>. That&#x27;s a perennial favourite of both HN and myself. In particular it addresses the question of <i>how to read different types of books</i> and <i>for different purposes</i>. In detail. In particular, Adler repeatedly stresses the notion of <i>reading as an inquiry</i>, in the sense that <i>you are asking questions of the book and the author</i>. If those questions are rewarded, all the better. If they&#x27;re not ... you might be better of spending time elsewhere.<p>&lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;howtoreadbook0000adle_y9v4" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;archive.org&#x2F;details&#x2F;howtoreadbook0000adle_y9v4</a>&gt;<p>I&#x27;ve referenced it nearly 30 times on HN: &lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hn.algolia.com&#x2F;?dateRange=all&amp;page=0&amp;prefix=false&amp;query=by%3Adredmorbius%20%22how%20to%20read%20a%20book%22&amp;sort=byPopularity&amp;type=comment" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;hn.algolia.com&#x2F;?dateRange=all&amp;page=0&amp;prefix=false&amp;qu...</a>&gt;<p>Disclaimer: I&#x27;m only about halfway through it myself, though the book <i>is</i> on my e-reader ;-)<p>On filters, I disagree with Burkeman, it <i>is</i> filter failure, and Burkeman is himself failing to define what sorts of filters are needed.<p>In the context of the &quot;haystack-sized piles of needles&quot;, it&#x27;s useful to consider the question <i>how many needles do I need?</i>, and to simply select a sufficient (and not excessive) number. This <i>does</i> presume that the stacks are of equivalent quality, which can pose a slight challenge, though factors such as reputation and some occasional broad sampling usually address this.<p>In particular, though, <i>in an environment with a surfeit of signals and records</i>, what is needed are <i>cheap, fast, no-regret rejection tools</i>. I&#x27;ve noted this a few times in earlier comments, e.g.: &lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=22208255" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=22208255</a>&gt; and &lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=31254795" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=31254795</a>&gt;.<p>In the physical world, our senses and mental capabilities provide us with this: we&#x27;re tuned to a limited set of stimuli (sight, sound, smell, taste, various touch, proprioception, and inner-state senses such as hunger, thirst, and need to void bowels or bladder). There&#x27;s a heck of a lot of other signals the Universe provides, <i>we are utterly blind to them</i> for the most part, and our lack of capacity to sense these <i>largely</i> doesn&#x27;t bother us. Even within our extant sense channels, we can only detect so much: visible light, but not radio or x-rays, the audible spectrum but not infra- or ultra-sonic frequencies, some smells with great sensitivity (petrichor, mercaptin) others not at all (water, carbon monoxide), etc.<p>In the world of data one of the most effective <i>and unbiased</i> rejection methods is random sampling. We usually think of this in terms of <i>data selected</i>, but it could as readily be expressed as <i>data rejected</i>. The reason statisticians sample randomly <i>is because measurement is expensive</i>, and quite often a highly accurate impression of a phenomenon can be gathered from only a few tens or hundreds of individual examples <i>if those themselves are selected without bias or are otherwise representative</i>.<p>For texts and readings, much depends on <i>why</i> you&#x27;re reading something. If it&#x27;s simply for entertainment, then the requisite question is &quot;am I being entertained&quot;. If it&#x27;s for <i>information</i>, then the question broadens, but I&#x27;d suggest:<p>- Is this actually informative? Is it telling me something I don&#x27;t already know (rather than reinforcing biases or existing beliefs)? Is it accurate? Is the information <i>durable</i>?<p>- Is this <i>useful</i>? Can I use the information, and will it change a future action or decision of mine? Does it put the <i>past</i> in a more comprehensible light?<p>- If a skill, <i>is the skill taught useful and durable?</i> I and many others have often noted that the base set of Unix &#x2F; Linux shell tools and editors provides a highly <i>useful</i> and <i>durable</i> skillset, one I first began acquiring 30 to 40 years ago, and still use daily. I&#x27;ve seen many <i>other</i> technical skillsets, including expensive training or books (some at an employers&#x27; cost, some at my own), come and go over that same time.<p>- How does this fit with an existing worldview or structure? I&#x27;ve begun specifically cultivating a few of my own ontologies and sense-making structures, and find that these provide useful lenses for assimilating and testing new information. Occasionally I&#x27;ll find other authors have anticipated my own notions, and the force with which <i>that</i> realisation hits is profound. It&#x27;s also a strong validation that I&#x27;m likely on a useful path, or at least one that others had previously found worth pursuing.<p>All of these boil down to &quot;Is this worth my time?&quot;<p>Note that most news, episodic broadcast media, and online content fares <i>abysmally</i> on the &quot;durability&quot; criterion. I don&#x27;t ignore these <i>entirely</i> (and struggle immensely with online content), but am <i>highly</i> cognisant that these tend to be the equivalents of fast food. As an occasional treat or spice ... not necessarily bad. But if these are your primary fare ... reconsider your priorities, environment, and patterns.<p>A practice I&#x27;m finding useful is to at least periodically consider what has be &quot;BOTI&quot; --- best of the interval. On some basis (weekly, monthly, quarterly), I&#x27;ll try to cast back over what I&#x27;ve read, heard, or viewed, and consider what&#x27;s been the most insightful or useful. For the past decade, that title&#x27;s gone to an <i>Aeon</i> piece by Michael Schulson, &quot;If You Can&#x27;t Choose Wisely, Choose Randomly&quot;, on the value of sortition: &lt;<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aeon.co&#x2F;essays&#x2F;if-you-can-t-choose-wisely-choose-randomly" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;aeon.co&#x2F;essays&#x2F;if-you-can-t-choose-wisely-choose-ran...</a>&gt;. And yes, that relates to my comments above on random sampling &#x2F; exclusion rather neatly.<p>As for the first time I realised that there <i>was</i> in fact far more information than I could reasonably access, it was at a library. On entering uni, I remember my first visit to the main campus library, <i>literally</i> a tower of books, holding several million volumes (and part of an even larger collection across other libraries both on campus and at other campuses). What I did instead was to treat the collection <i>as a resource</i>, something to ask questions of, with a few (small) sections explored in detail, many others skipped entirely, and some sampled from selectively. A particular memory was of seeing the film <i>The Last Emperor</i>, a biography of Puyi, the last emperor of China, and largely a Japanese puppet. One scene of the film featured a <i>Time Magazine</i> photographer, and the thought occurred that there was probably a story from that time. I tracked this down and read the story, published in the 1930s, from a copy dating to that time. The experience of &quot;oh, I can track that down&quot; has stuck with me. And yes, losing on-campus access to academic stacks was an absolutely wrenching experience for me, moderated now through the Internet Archive, Project Gutenberg, Library Genesis, ZLibrary, and other resources.<p>And yes, if something&#x27;s not worth reading, it&#x27;s not worth reading, as noted in an exchange I had on HN itself over the past day or so.
throwaway9980大约 2 年前
Hacker News is my river.
Hadriel大约 2 年前
tldr: &quot;To return to information overload: this means treating your &quot;to read&quot; pile like a river (a stream that flows past you, and from which you pluck a few choice items, here and there) instead of a bucket (which demands that you empty it). After all, you presumably don&#x27;t feel overwhelmed by all the unread books in the British Library – and not because there aren&#x27;t an overwhelming number of them, but because it never occurred to you that it might be your job to get through them all.&quot;
martincmartin大约 2 年前
Anyone have a tl;dr for this?
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jakkos大约 2 年前
bookmark
t344344大约 2 年前
I found most books are just garbage. Take Moby-Dick for example, interesting story that could be compressed to two pages, but it is 400 pages of boring stuff, that goes on and on. And it can not be criticized as it is &quot;fundamental corner stone of American literature&quot;!<p>Watching documentary about original story, and a few pieces about 19 century whale hunting, is much better use of time!