A Healthy News Diet

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFGuDm2JiAGZWWKBo/a-healthy-news-diet

Link post Contents

Examples of specific things you might want to get out of reading news

Examples of non-news things that you can do to pass time

  1. Open the Books app2. Go the the Book Store tab3. Search for books you want to read4. Buy/​download them If you can’t find a book you’re looking for, or don’t have the funds, or don’t agree with capitalism, or whatever, you can find almost any book, in epub or pdf format, on Library Genesis. How to write a blog post/​essay on your phone Another great activity that could be available in two taps of the light rectangle is working on some writing. The Notes app that comes installed on the iPhone is a decent place to get started. Create a folder for Posts and start filling it up with stuff whenever you’re bored. If you want an app that looks nicer or has more functionality, there are lots of options. I use Notion. Where to find good long form content I don’t read long form content, so please take suggestions on this list as options to check out for yourself, not as strong recommendations. I do plan on reading more from these sites as I start to implement my news diet, however, so I may come back and prune/​add depending on what I find.

Getting what you want out of news

If you are giving yourself a set amount of time to read news every week, you’ll need to do it efficiently in order to learn what you want from it. I think the next step after coming up with a list of things you want to get out of reading news is to go through the list and come up with where the information about each item is going to come from. For example, if one thing you want to keep tabs on by reading news is the health of the US economy, you might have a list of statistics you use to get a picture of that. So maybe like

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFGuDm2JiAGZWWKBo/a-healthy-news-diet?commentId=6ybDRzw9frLdz34Lu

Thanks for the recommendation for Library Genesis. I found 4⁄10 of the books I searched for on there, so not as good as my local library, but it eliminates having to wait.I’d encourage people, though, to avoid reading books on a smart phone if possible. Reading on the one device that is most likely to distract you from reading seems like a failure-prone plan. I use a Kindle for ebooks, and it’s old and slow enough that I am not tempted to do anything but read on it.

Comment

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFGuDm2JiAGZWWKBo/a-healthy-news-diet?commentId=ptez3axE472QjdNxd

That’s surprising low for LibGen. Are you perhaps looking for fiction works and forgetting to search the fiction database? It’s separate from the nonfiction (one of a number of really bad usability issues LG has is fragmented databases).

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFGuDm2JiAGZWWKBo/a-healthy-news-diet?commentId=HLpZpsYCegLczbE6s

Maybe it would be also useful to use two web browsers, or two different profiles of the same browser, one for "serious work" (e.g. online banking) and one for "distractions" (e.g. social networks), with blockers set up to prevent misuse. Two different sets of bookmarks, different autocomplete answers, etc. This would make transition from work to wasting time less convenient. The autocomplete mechanism is like offering someone a drink just when they try to stop drinking.

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFGuDm2JiAGZWWKBo/a-healthy-news-diet?commentId=Nb7PA5nQmc9HYhEGq

All uses of the second person "you" and "your" in this post are in fact me talking to myself I wanted to upvote just for this note, but I decided it’s not good to upvote things based on the first sentence or so. So I read the post, and it’s good, so now I can upvote guilt-free!

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/zFGuDm2JiAGZWWKBo/a-healthy-news-diet?commentId=ukTTCwgaEfNXBoEF7

Something that may be interesting to pair with this post: Ribbonfarm: Against Waldenponding