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  1. MediumDeep Dave12/16/192 min
    27 reads14 comments
    9.3
    Medium
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    • Jim4 years ago

      I do enjoy an old fashioned printed newspaper ... I get both e-news and printed and both have value, but the printed versions feel better and I like finishing the paper and knowing it is done. e-papers just go on forever.

    • loundytampa4 years ago

      I think I might need this , I’m gonna start with one day of NO SCREENS .., sometime in March

      • bill
        Top reader of all time
        4 years ago

        Do it! Keep a pair of walking shoes by the door, you’ll probably end up doing a lot of walking around. That’s what I do at least. You can podcast, but how will you get to it without looking at a screen. 😂😂😂

    • bill
      Top reader of all time
      4 years ago

      AWESOME! I'm so stoked to have Deep Dave in the Readup community.

      Just like Dave, I have been trying to better understand how I learn. And I'm trying to improve the way I consume information, especially over the internet.

      I too read Cal Newport's Digital Minimalism. In fact, I was with Cal the night before the book launched. He shook my hand, signed my book, and said he was interested in Readup (which was then still called "reallyread.it.") Pretty surreal memory at this point. All of that happened before I started living in a way that can only be described as radically-digitally-minimal. These days, I'm at peace with the black mirror, which I still keep at a safe distance. For the most part, I know how I want to dance with the devil. It's fun.

      Great to have you here, Dave. Keep reading and writing! Your English is great!

      • deephdave
        Top reader of all timeScout
        4 years ago

        Thank you, Bill, for scouting this!

        Deep Work and Digital Minimalism are insightful books by Cal Newport to explore and understand ways of focusing on what matters and ignore the clutter.

        The Internet has become noisy over time and I have been learning to explore resources, finding people to follow, learn and also meeting them in real life.

        • bill
          Top reader of all time
          4 years ago

          AOTD! Congrats, Deep Dave! Not since the arrival of our mad queen Alexa has a new user made such a splash.

          Your English is excellent. You have a very natural voice. Keep reading and writing!

          • deephdave
            Top reader of all timeScout
            4 years ago

            Thank you, Bill!

    • Jim4 years ago

      Breaking news used to mean just that.... News that is new and important, now it seems everything is 'Breaking!'

    • BetSheWet4 years ago

      6-8 hours of screen time a day? Finally someone who understands! What makes the breaking news so addicting is our culture as a whole consuming it. It becomes workplace and social topics of discussion and if you don’t live that lifestyle then you’re left not knowing what these folks are rambling on about... there’s a high to having read a recent news article and then hearing somebody mentioning the same topic; not a healthy high, but a high nonetheless

    • Pegeen
      Top reader this weekReading streakScoutScribe
      4 years ago

      This is a great article and resource. I first heard about the slow news movement from an article on Readup almost a year ago. It makes so much sense, as anything fast can trigger and send one off in reactive mode instead of proactive. Slow is better - mindful presence in everything I do whether it’s eating, exercising, reading, making dinner.

    • jbuchana4 years ago

      I like the concept of "slow news."

      • bill
        Top reader of all time
        4 years ago

        Verrrrrry interesting. Can you elaborate?

        • jbuchana4 years ago

          Time gives perspective, it prevents one from being led this way and another by the novelty of the information being consumed. One can use the knowledge gained from more sources about a single piece of information.

          • bill
            Top reader of all time
            4 years ago

            Yes. Absolutely. I'm a big believer in all things "slow." All things in life are better with one more good deep breath. Readup has always felt "slow" to me and I want to keep it that way even though we're about to go into turbo-growth mode.

            I think of Readup as the ultimate source for slow news. I've been on Twitter a bit recently and it has shocked me the way that everything, everywhere is so current. That's Twitter's appeal. It aims to be "what's happening now," and it does an incredibly great job at that.

            Right now in the Readup Top 10: Joyce Carol Oates on JonBenet Ramsey (from 1999!!) and David Brooks in The Atlantic (from 01). These are classics.

            How cool that this connects to our other thread about writing and legacy. Any writing that "stands the test of time" is clearly "worth it" for some reason. That's the problem with super-fast news. So much of it won't stand the test of time, which sort of makes it a waste of time. Right?