A GTD Approach to Organizing and Reading Your Feeds

By Daniel Miessler on January 3rd, 2008: Tagged as GTD | Google | Productivity
  • Yes, and many are working on tweaking their systems so that one can filter that stuff completely. I can't wait.

  • The social filters of Slashdot, Reddit, Digg, etc. may be working better that I realize. If I had to go through all of the new web pages that are created each day it would probably be much less interesting than the stories that these sites point out. It just seems that there is a lot of the news of the wierd or "look at this funny picture" kind of posts on these social news sites.

  • @Gary


    Yeah, the best way to do this is to subscribe to feeds that are pre-filtered. That's the idea with Digg and Reddit, but as you point out it's not going so well...


    There are also features on sites like Reddit where you can select the "recommended" tab, which will supposedly display content that you enjoy based on your up-votes and down-votes. But that both requires you to vote and also isn't very accurate.


    Alas, yes...we just have to skim very quickly and pick out the nuggets.

  • I like the idea of sorting feeds by location. It's very much like creating to do lists organized by location except that the feeds are creating the lists.


    Do you have any suggestions for filtering feeds so that one could focus more upon the articles that are most interesting? This would be particularly important for sites like Reddit and such that have a low signal-to-noise ratio (i.e., many more uninteresting articles than interesting articles). Sorting by priority would seem to be a step toward filtering, but it would still require reading through the lists to find the interesting articles.

  • I found it very helpful, yes.


    I suggest finding a solid summary of the system. The most important parts can be pulled from one of those.

  • I assume GTD == "Getting Things Done" by David Allen. I am trying to read his book right now, but I find it a little tedious. He repeats himself sometimes, and I get tired of "Five Points to Better..." and "Seven Principles of..." and "Thirty-seven ways to...". I guess a bunch of bullet points remind me too much of all the terrible sermons I've heard that followed the same pattern :-) Did you find the book very helpful Daniel?

  • I am trying similar content with a significantly shorter delivery (and a new title). I'm trying to learn about optimal content length.

  • Ufuk

    Why again?

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