Ask HN: Addicted to HN
These days I see myself spending a lot of time on HN.
It's good spend an hour or so to learn something new and interesting but I sometimes spend too much time on it and then I don't have time left to work on my projects.
Has any of you faced this problem? How did you overcome it?
12 comments
[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 12.5 ms ] threadThanks :)
Thanks :)
Thanks alot :)
The only solution I find that really works is to get more involved and make it a point to post good comments. If I feel bad about not participating in HN well, either it makes me write good comments and have new insights or get back to work. I've also started taking notes on my blog from articles and discussions I find interesting.
127.0.0.1 news.ycombinator.com
That means that if I open a browser and try to come here I get nothing. If I really want to visit here I need to open up the hosts file and comment out that line, which is slightly painful because you have to get administrator privileges to edit it. I find that the extra effort involved is enough to stop the mindless "I'm bored, I know, I'll check HN" kind of time wasting and make me realise I should be doing something productive.
I have found:
Through HN, which is more than I can say for any other online community that I've ever been a part of.And all that for 'free', if you don't count the time spent on it. If you would count the time then the 'investment' side of it (I estimated that at roughly 4 months full time) at a 'regular' salary (say 100K per year) would equate to about $30K, I would say I'm more than break-even already in a direct monetary sense but that's not where the real value is, the real value is in the increase of your potential by being able to tap in to this resource.
Time spent on HN to me is now a form of investment with a completely unknown return, both in kind and magnitude and I don't mind spending time to give others back the same that I have received.
HN is a pay-it-forward scheme if you 'use' it properly.