How To Effectively Manage and Process Your RSS Feeds [GTD]
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Those of us who use
RSS
>
tend to struggle constantly with two impulses: 1) the drive to reduce your
information inputs in order to focus more on output, and 2) the urge
to seek out additional stuff that you’ll likely end up pruning later
in step 1.
But even after people settle on a good set of feeds, people usually spend
far too long reading them every day, and just looking at an unruly
mass of unread items is enough to stress you out. Most don’t feel their
feeds are organized, don’t know which ones they should be reading at any
given time. But there’s a solution.
Organize your feeds into groups based on the time you have available to read them. Separate current-events and work-related content from specialized and
personal content. This way you can take in your feeds in more manageable
chunks based on where you are.
[ NOTE: My feeds configured using
Google Reader
>. ]
Examples
Blogs
What: Personal blogs, any sites where the personality of the
site’s author(s) come through.When: Every 1-3 days, after hours and during breaks.
Bookmarks
What: Here I subscribe to all my friends’ and associates’ bookmarks
through del.icio.us.When: As they come in, after hours. This
is a discovery activity, meaning I’m using them to find new stuff to learn.
Books
What: Here I subscribe to popular book lists, such as the New
York Times bestseller list, friends/associates reading on
LibraryThing
>, etc.When: As they come in, after hours. Again, this is
about expanding, which isn’t done during time crunches.
News
What: This is where you put your primary news feeds, i.e. the ones you use to stay up to date on current events,
industry news, etc. Don’t put any specialized feeds here that aren’t
necessary for current events or work. This folder is for acquiring knowledge
about current events that may help you during the day. Think about putting
pre-aggregated feeds in here, like Techmeme, Techcrunch, etc. in order to
save time.When: This I usually read every day
upon arriving to work, and possibly again during breaks and lunch.
Main
What: This is where you put most of your feeds. This is your
general folder. The catch-all. Science feeds, comic feeds, specialized
news-sites, non-personal blogs that you follow — whatever.When:
Usually at least once a day — after hours.
Get a weekly breakdown of what’s happening in security and tech—and why it matters.
SecBlogs
What: This is where I put my security blogs. This is a good
folder for specialized industry sites that you follow. As with blogs vs.
main, I differentiate between a security blog and a security site by how
much of a personal feel the site has to it. If it’s a lot, it’s a blog; if
it’s more like a list of stories, I put it under Secnews.When:
Once every 1-3 days usually at the beginning of the work day while I’m
reading news. Security is a philosophical discipline, so it’s important to
follow what people are discussing within the field. It helps you to
cultivate your own ideas.
SecNews
What: Security content that doesn’t fall under News or
SecurityBlogs. I put a lot of the big security aggregation feeds in
here. SecGuru, Altavista, etc.When: Every day along with my news. In fact, sometimes I’ll read
this folder and skip the regular news. It just depends on how I feel and
whether or not I’m going to possibly need to discuss some current events in
the space.
SecVulns
What: All your vulnerability feeds. Enough said.When:
This depends on what kind of work I’m doing. If I’m doing heavy security
testing at the time I’ll be in this often. If not, I’ll pick up the major
ones from the SecNews folder.
Trackers
What: I use these folders to track certain things I’m
interested in. Currently one such topic is the
iPhone
>. So what you put in the folder is various ways of following what’s being
said about your given subject. For example, for the iPhone tracker I’m
currently following an iPhone blog called My iPhone, and the
Google Blog Search results
>
for the term. Other ideas include ego searches for your own name and/or
searches for your friends’ names.When: As they come up, after
hours.
Conclusion
When you organize your feeds in this way you help remove the stress of not
knowing if you read “enough”. This is something of a
GTD
>
approach to things — allowing you to read the appropriate folders according
to what frame of mind you’re in at the time, and how much time you have to
spend. In short, read the folders that you have time for, and
close your reader. Done.
This is GTD-like because it allows you to develop trust in your method,
which eliminates stress and allows you to focus on what you’re doing.
Without this approach many constantly fret about whether or not they’ve
missed something important.
I find this system helps me greatly, and I hope it will help you as well. If
you have any comments, questions, or recommendations on how to improve this
system
I’d really love to hear them
>.
[ Jun 1, 2007 ]
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