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Paul Ford: The two kinds of distraction
Merlin Mann | Oct 18 2005
Followup/Distraction (Ftrain.com) Paul Ford, eloquent as usual, on the two kinds of distractions—the wide kind that are the equivalent of a kitty toy for distractible humans, and the narrow kind, which stimulates you to follow a train of thought into tunnels it’s nary entered. Paul concludes, in part:
Paul, I should also note, earlier mentions some affection for the AlphaSmart Neo:
I think I want me one of them. [ thanks, [Donna](http://www.deliriouscool.org/ 5 Comments
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![]() I think Mr. Ford has...Submitted by Gary Varner (not verified) on October 18, 2005 - 12:03pm.
I think Mr. Ford has tapped that gnawing in those of us old enough to have been thinking individuals before the ‘net that our intellectual systems were working nicely, thank you, before the advent of “anything, anytime.” He echos my own thoughts of late pulling me back to handwriting, Moleskines instead of .doc files in a well-intentioned folder hierarchy, and shutting down Web connectivity for long periods of good old-fashioned thinking. »
![]() If I were a cynic,...Submitted by Robert 'Groby' Blum (not verified) on October 18, 2005 - 2:47pm.
If I were a cynic, I could say it’s just the pendulum swinging the other direction. Since I’m trying to shed my inner cynic, let’s look at this a different way: A computer gives us many ways to express ourselves, to get things done. While it is tempting to use all the tools at our disposal, gaining mastership in any medium means being able to work with restrained tool sets. In fact, restraints enable expression. In that light, I don’t think it’s a coincidence we simplify our computer usage as we grow older - hopefully, along the way, while getting older, we learned a bit and have now mastered this medium sufficiently to restrain wisely. That doesn’t mean computers are inherently bad - but we’re learning when and how to use them, instead of applying them everywhere and anytime. »
![]() I'm almost positive that I...Submitted by Donna (nammer) (not verified) on October 19, 2005 - 7:27am.
I’m almost positive that I mentioned my affection for the Alphasmart Neo in an earlier comment; it didn’t have the best keyboard “feel”, but it was a fine lofi machine. I think my perfect lofi item would also have a slightly bigger screen… »
![]() [...] Holidays, long absences (or...Submitted by the sift everything experiment » Less fat, more meat (not verified) on October 20, 2005 - 2:14am.
[…] Holidays, long absences (or large abscesses), and in my case a gynormous move, threaten the very foundation of something like a blog. In reality a blog is incredibly fragile. Mostly carried by the resolve of a single author, a blog is susceptible to all the distractions of a just one brain. While thinking about that I spotted Merlin’s snip of Paul Ford’s take on distraction. […] »
![]() [...] Last week, I enjoyed...Submitted by Guest post: More on distractions, from Paul Ford | 43 Folder (not verified) on October 24, 2005 - 3:07am.
[…] Last week, I enjoyed and linked to Paul Ford’s Ftrain post, “Followup/Distraction.” It led to us exchanging a few chatty emails, so I asked Paul to favor us with a deeper write-up on his idea of narrow vs. broad distractions. More specifically, I asked: “Is there such a thing as a good distraction?” […] »
About Merlin MannBio Merlin Mann is an independent writer, speaker, and broadcaster. He’s best known for being the guy who started the website you’re reading right now. He lives in San Francisco, does lots of public speaking, and helps make cool things like You Look Nice Today. Also? He looks like this, answers questions, and has something like a life. Merlin’s favorite thing he’s written recently is a short essay called, “Better.” |
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