Curing data hoarding: an update

rehab

It’s been a month since I recognized that I was a hard code data hoarder, so here’s a quick update on some tricks I’ve developed to cure my data hoarding “condition”:

Flipboard is a fantastic iPad app that lets you consume your Google Reader stuff along with curated content and social media feeds in a magazine-like format that puts the articles on a page in a really attractive layout that also lets you get the gist of most of them without having to click (tap) through.

This has tamed my Google Reader obsession in a few ways (to be clear, I’m still using Reader, but as a data store, not as an interface.)  For starters, there’s no unread count staring at me.  The summaries I mentioned earlier make it easier to just scan the intro to each story without feeling the urge to skim the whole thing.

And finally, a surprise I didn’t think I was able to handle: I now read new stuff first.  In the past I’d start way back at the beginning so I wouldn’t miss the context of updates to evolving stories.  This was seriously holding me back, because I couldn’t read the “news” without starting where I left off, when the most valuable, gotta act now stuff is at the other end of the pipe.  It turns out I’m pretty good at deducing what’s new from the latest stuff.  Huh.

For Twitter data hoarding, three techniques have been helping. My original plan to follow more users to overwhelm the stream is kind of working, but to be honest I haven’t built that list up very much, because I’ve been spending less time on Twitter as a whole (I’ve been tempted to try one of those autofollow automation systems, but it still feels weird to me.)

Spending less time on Twitter is mostly a result of being really really busy, which requires focus, which requires less attention to the social streams outside of allocated times.  Now I know I only have 10 minutes to spare out of a given chunk of time, so I tend to just read what’s happened in the past hour or so, and interact from there.

Lastly, I’ve started using HootSuite for scheduled tweets, so I can batch-submit my non-conversational “timeless gems” and spread them out over a few days.  This lets me spend my active time on Twitter in a more conversational mode, and removes the danger of ducking in to post something and getting sucked into reading everything that’s happened since I last checked (my HootSuite dashboard doesn’t show a stream, just an input box.)

And in the other area of data hoarding where I download everything compulsively to read, listen to or watch later, the solution got pretty simple: my hard disk got full.  Adding scarcity to the equation has forced me to think a little more before I grab things for “later,” so I think I’ll hold off on hardware upgrades for a little while longer.

Photo by tedmurphy


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2 responses to “Curing data hoarding: an update”

  1. […] As I mentioned yesterday, I use Flipboard for most of my blog reading, which has really helped me save time while feeling that I’m staying on top of things.  I also subscribe to this blog, not so much to review what I’ve been writing, but to make sure the RSS is working (I’ve had problems in the past.) […]

  2. […] of what I store, access, and consume is going to have to change – some of it voluntarily by my continued anti-hoarding techniques (no, the new drives don’t necessarily help, but they’re for a specific use that will […]

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