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On information overload

Fred Oliveira on March 5, 2008

A few years ago, not a lot of people used RSS, and those that did, didn’t really subscribe to that many feeds. We limited ourselves to a small set of sites and sources to keep up with because of the limited nature of the tools we used (browser bookmarks, and our memory for remembering URLs). We’re now at a time when the tools exist to help us not have to remember.

This could be you, right?

My RSS reader keeps track of hundreds of feeds for me, and I’ve grown used to the fact that I’ll keep around 500 unread items there at all times (or I’d likely make no use of all that information because I’d just be skipping through it). My inbox is a constant source of distraction, with emails coming in at a crazy rate. Twitteriffic (when I dare to run it) notifies me every 3 minutes of the thoughts of around 200 people (I can’t follow more because I’d get absolutely nothing done, and I wouldn’t really be paying attention anyway).

Social networks keep letting me know that people want to get in touch: it’s either friend requests on Facebook, event updates, or new connections on LinkedIn. Last.fm keeps smacking me in the face whenever people I know recommend new music. Growl on my mac pops a notification several times a minute when any of these events takes place. The Adium duck keeps jumping on my dock because people come online, or go offline, or message me, or, I don’t know, some other apparently important thing happens in the never actually paused instant messaging world.

How do we make sense of it?

We take the next step - we create tools to clean up the mess that our current set of tools is building up. We create filters, that deliver only the information we care about, when we care about it, to our screens or phones or whatever we’re connected to the web through (our chumbys and ambient devices, our nabaztags and iphones, our buglabs or our fridges).

Our work as entrepreneurs, designers, engineers, craftsmen is to keep evolving a set of tools to relieve our brains from this huge mess. Lifestreaming, friend-feeding, micro-blogging, content-chunking, micro-formating is here to stay, but our brains can’t handle it alone.

Now do excuse me while I go clean-up my inbox, update my twitter and read up on some feeds. I think I’m still up for some information overload tonight.


Comments on this post

zapada

I’ve been using AideRSS to filter my feeds, and for the most part it’s pretty accurate in giving me only the important stuff.

http://www.aiderss.com/

Hallvard Lavoll-Nylenna

Yes, too much information - and I want it all. Biggest problem with all information and news on RSS is all the news you filter out. We still need to know about places on earth not as good of as ours. We need to know about bad stuff happening with people in order to care. We are still citizens of the earth and we can’t hide by filtering out

Mat

Fred
Do we need all this info? Probably not.
Is it addictive? Definitely.
I simply limit my daily time reading RSS feeds to 30 minutes. I click on my favourite feeds first, then other feeds at random. This way I feel that I am on top of my data habit.

information overload : blog.delaranja.com

[...] information overload Our work as entrepreneurs, designers, engineers, craftsmen is to keep evolving a set of tools to relieve our brains from this huge mess. Lifestreaming, friend-feeding, micro-blogging, content-chunking, micro-formating is here to stay, but our brains can’t handle it alone.(Fred Oliveira on information overload) [...]

Carl

Try BitLiteracy.Com and “let the bits go…” (works for me)

Pedro Machado Santa

I’ve recently figured it out loud - the overload problem -, and I can’t have a clear ideia how to solve such a mess. But, I’ve worked with bayesian filters dealing on my spam, and I’m very impressed on how useful those can be, and I think they have very good probability on effectivelly sorting things out for you.

It’s inhuman to keep up on a good bunch of feeds. And sometimes we think that we are flooded on information, being somewhat compelled to read all that stuff to keep up, or else we think we’ll miss something important. Aside from information overload, we’re suffering from scarce information filtering, wich boosts the problem. On the latter, definitetly we need some sort of improvement, like an “Feed Digital Assistant System” (wtf?) who sorts out the items we’re more likely to enjoy and step further to the less relevant after the relevant has been read.

Bayesian it’s one way, surely. I can’t figure any other right now. Post on if you have ideas.

Cheers.

Webreakstuff » Friendfeed: Cute, yes. Helping? No.

[...] week I posted about information overload and how we were being constantly bombed with content bits from all corners of the web (like [...]

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