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NewTypes2014-02-12 01:38:06
RSS
NewTypes, 2014-02-12 01:38:06

How do you stay up to date with the latest news?

Situation: I read about 3 dozen selected resources, but I devote only an hour to my time. To read all the new posts of Habr, I spend about 5-10 minutes - that is, this hour is used in an extremely inefficient way.
Question: how to optimize the process, but not lose important details?
My opinion: I use RSS, I run through the search for the occurrence of keywords in the feeds, I read the most valuable first. But as often happens, the most interesting and promising is when you do not expect it. That is, I can skip a poor-looking post, but a good one for the separately mentioned details in it. Second, it's shorthand. Third, have good connections when you have people willing to share new information from the fields in a concise manner.
And how do you deal with this problem? Of course, it is not inherent in everyone, but still

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6 answer(s)
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Dan Ivanov, 2014-02-12
@NewTypes

Flipboard has themed communities, g+ community, twitter.
I also sometimes listen to podcasts.

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Valery Dmitriev, 2014-02-12
@rotor

Twitter. Best suited - we run through everything with our eyes, we read only interesting things.

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Zhainar, 2015-02-22
@zhainar

IMHO, staying up to date with everything is like having informational diarrhea. The most interesting will always be shown on many resources, and reviewing everything in a row is just your time to kill. My position: it is better to read fundamental things (that is, books and works) than a little bit of everything and nothing at all.

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Dmitry, 2014-02-12
@ExileeD

I look through articles in the Rss reader. If an article is interesting, I put it in my pocket and read it on the way to work / study or when I have a free minute.

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Egor Kazantsev, 2014-02-12
@saintbyte

Yes, not how - information noise is bad for my mental health

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Roman Korobko, 2019-07-16
@Viscom

As Zhainar , Egor Kazantsev said : Hurry without fuss. You yourself wrote - to have "verified" (reliable) sources . These include those who speak succinctly (and not a hundred volumes of the most important thing in the world ):
- " little ": as simple as possible, thesis .. close to understanding by children
- " to the point " only that which allows you to qualitatively better solve your problem.
The rest is filtered out as informational noise and read occasionally, when there is absolutely nothing to do, in the hope that something from this rubbish will accidentally turn out to be precious.

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