Ask HN: How do you use your computer intentionally/deliberately?
Currently I'm trying to sort out my life, partially with meditation, partially with thinking/writing and partially with some reading. Computer is pretty helpful for the latter two but I also end up using it a lot to watch anime or spend time on discord. I don't mind this - if I don't relax with the internet I'll end up messing around some other way naturally.
But it bothers me how little awareness I have while using my computer. A lot of times I'll be doing something like using twitter and I won't even be enjoying it - I'm just trying to burn time. If I snapped out of it and checked in with myself for 20 seconds, I bet at least half the time I could find something I'd both enjoy doing more and that's marginally useful. But it's really hard to do this without just blocking most of the internet and I don't want to do that.
What do you guys do to deal with your computer useage?
5 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 24.4 ms ] threadIt beats doing what you are talking about- dead scrolling random internet stuff just to "burn hours" (I've heard that before but still, what a sad sentiment).
Everyday idle time suckers go on the first workspace, the second only has actual "work". I'll switch to the 2nd workspace and try to have discipline about switching back to the "nonwork" workspace.
Entertainment —including HN— is pulled via RSS and presented as a list of plaintext, from which I actively select. The browser is open as long as I am actively searching (via engine or within-page search) for something, but if I find myself scrolling around passively, I close it.
Also the HN frontpage scrolls on my laptop —if barely— but I have newsboat configured so that when there are too many new HN stories, I view them by subsets of alphabetical order (currently a-g, h-q, r-z but I should probably chop at e or f instead) so they will fit on a screen (~70 stories).
Some weeks I am involved enough with my personal projects that I forget to read HN for several days; in that case I have channels set up that show only 1, 2, 3, and 4 day old content — which can then be broken down by subsets, or manually even finer, so I'm only ever picking from less than a screenful.
(when I'm that far behind, I mostly mark entire screenfuls as seen, without clicking through at all: maybe the greatest value of this system is realising that one can very easily not click on attractive things and one's life is still full of more interesting things than one truly has time for?)