Frequently asked questions about thinking, epistemology, and cognitive tools. 1214 answers
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Choose your largest current inbox — email, Slack, a notes capture app, or a read-it-later queue. Before processing any items, perform a triage pass. Set a timer for three minutes. Scan every item without opening, reading in full, or acting on any of them. As you scan, sort each item into one of.
The most common failure is treating triage as processing. You scan your inbox to prioritize it, but the scan turns into reading, and the reading turns into responding, and twenty minutes later you have answered four emails and forgotten that you were supposed to be triaging. The triage pass has.
Not all information is equally valuable — sort by priority before processing.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Build and test a read-it-later system this week. Step 1: Choose one tool — Pocket, Instapaper, Readwise Reader, a browser extension, or even a single note titled 'Reading Queue' in your notes app. The tool does not matter. The single location does. Step 2: For three days, every time you encounter.
The most common failure is treating your read-it-later system as a bookmark graveyard. You save articles compulsively — ten, fifteen, twenty per week — with the vague intention of reading them "when you have time." You never have time, because you never schedule time. The queue grows from twenty.
Queue long-form content for dedicated reading time rather than interrupting current work.
Taking notes while reading or listening forces active processing.
Taking notes while reading or listening forces active processing.
Taking notes while reading or listening forces active processing.
Taking notes while reading or listening forces active processing.
Taking notes while reading or listening forces active processing.
Taking notes while reading or listening forces active processing.