Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Attention Bankruptcy

Last week I took a critical look at what I was paying attention to. I started with email and mailing lists, moved to social networks, and finally ended up at my feed reader. In each application I was sifting through huge amounts of data, and in many cases not really coming up with much to show for it.

Yes it was nice to know that I always had something to read online, but that wasn't really a good enough reason for collecting all of this attention debt.

In each case I looked at a particular set of in-boxes (social networks, email, rss, etc...) and used a star or bookmark mechanism to see how much of that in-box I really found valuable.

I started with email, and the first thing I learned is that I was subscribed to about 20 mailing lists that I just didn't care about. After a week I hadn't marked a single message with a star, and in many cases had just marked all of my unread list mail as read just to get rid of it. So, I unsubscribed from just about every list.

Then I moved on to social networks. I don't pay attention to most of them and filter the mail they produce to a bacn file, where I can safely skim it once in awhile. I ignore about 90% of the things that happen on Facebook, so I went through my profile and killed almost every application that was on it. Then I took a critical look at FriendFeed.

FriendFeed really has potential, and can provide some great stuff to read, however, it can also provide a huge amount of noise. Maybe it's just me, but when I had about 40 friends on FriendFeed, I found the application almost completely unusable. It was generating hundreds of items to read a day, much more than I could keep up with. So, I started deleting "Friends" and made a new rule for myself that I will only subscribe to people I have actually met and talked to more than once.

Finally, I went through my rss feeds. This was probably the worst area for me. I found it was impossible to make a keep or trash decision for most of my feeds. I mean, I had subscribed to them so they were all interesting, but it was just too much stuff. So I made a list of the feeds I had to keep, and then deleted everything else (about 80% of my feeds).

A week later, I find that I can go to bed in the evening feeling completely caught up with no unread mail, feeds, or other hanging attention grabbers. I haven't felt out of touch on anything, and have much more time for thinking, writing, and work.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Twitter Early Adopter

I stumbled on this blog post about the recent growth in Twitter. It suggests that the early adopter phase for Twitter is at an end, and that the company has moved into the mainstream category. I'm not sure I agree with that yet, but it was interesting to go back and find my first tweet. So it turns out that I've been using Twitter since December 8, 2006.