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Overall it's about being comfortable with how much you want to consume, as long as you have the filters in place to ensure that the most important developments are not missed. To me, all the excess is not a problem, if anything I wish I could spend more time going through the info and follow more people! There are so many interesting people and ideas out there.
http://informationcoping.wikispaces.com
But I kept at it, and eventually realized 1) what services I liked, 2) how to use them more effectively, and 3) that I was being my own worst enemy and draining the fun out of things. Now I set some goals, but don't stress myself out because this is really all for fun, all for learning...
I believe that the the more we share, the better we will become. But I also think that we need much better and simpler ways to control all this information. Right now, it's like trying to manage a Sky+ HD box with a Zenith Space Command. Surely, this can be better.
More here, if you're interested:
http://www.i-boy.com/weblog/2008/11/signal-to-n...
~G~
The problem is that those that are more well informed win. So I try to get as much useful and relevant information as I can. And there's not a shortage of useful and relevant information.
Everything is useful and relevant if I have broad enough interests. Sure, I could narrow my interests, but that also would make me more misinformed.
I don't think that those who are more informed of more topics "win." I'm an engineer and if I keep my knowledge of a few key subjects current and relevant then I'm doing well by my standards. I don't need to know about irrelevant topics to be a good engineer, or a "winner" for that matter. It doesn't hurt to read the news though. Maybe Louis wants to weigh in on that one.
always better isn't necessarily true. Even in our little niche of the
tech blogosphere, it's not uncommon to see the top 10 sites all write
their own reactions to the same story, so being subscribed to all
actually wastes you time.
But to be more informed about those topics that are important to you
makes sense for sure. If your interests are diverse, it may take a
larger superset of data.