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All the way back in 1993, the late Neil Postman warned us against the culture of technology, where anything representing technological progress was deemed as good, instead of weighing the pros and cons. Oh man, doesn’t this hit home with the Apple Watch? You can make a list of the good things about it if it counts your steps and get you more active. If an old person falls, it sends a warning and help is alerted. But shouldn’t we make a list of potential downsides such as the constant ability to be distracted from the present moment, or perhaps the constant emission of electromagnetic fields on a device strapped to your body?
Newport talks about examples from The New York Times pressuring their top reporters to regularly tweet (while their prestige comes from investigative journalism and complex stories, they still want distractible, low value noise instead of quality work. And Marissa Mayer banned Yahoo employees from working remotely, entirely due to a perceived lack of productivity (they would track employees as they logged-in to a remote server to get email). It’s all because the deep work that provides the real value in today’s economy is invisible, along the way at least.
What you’ll learn during this episode:
So ― how do you kick some butt and become a Deep Worker??? Here are the top tips I’ve gathered from the book:
TIMESTAMPS:
The morphing of technology with humanity is not necessarily a good thing. [05:04]
Is commuting to work and school always best? [08:45]
The skillful management of attention is the key to living a good life. [10:04]
The idle mind tends to fixate on the negative. [13:12]
Schedule some time (actually use your calendar) an hour in the morning to work on highly cognitive demand tasks when you are most fresh. [15:18]
Be okay with annoying people by not responding immediately. Keep track of how you spend your time. [17:13]
Have the discipline to protect your time. Have a shut-down time as well. [19:03]
If you are going to wait around for inspiration to strike you like a lightning bolt, you’re going to be in the amateur division. [19:51]
LINKS:
QUOTES:
By Podcast Notes4.3
7474 ratings
All the way back in 1993, the late Neil Postman warned us against the culture of technology, where anything representing technological progress was deemed as good, instead of weighing the pros and cons. Oh man, doesn’t this hit home with the Apple Watch? You can make a list of the good things about it if it counts your steps and get you more active. If an old person falls, it sends a warning and help is alerted. But shouldn’t we make a list of potential downsides such as the constant ability to be distracted from the present moment, or perhaps the constant emission of electromagnetic fields on a device strapped to your body?
Newport talks about examples from The New York Times pressuring their top reporters to regularly tweet (while their prestige comes from investigative journalism and complex stories, they still want distractible, low value noise instead of quality work. And Marissa Mayer banned Yahoo employees from working remotely, entirely due to a perceived lack of productivity (they would track employees as they logged-in to a remote server to get email). It’s all because the deep work that provides the real value in today’s economy is invisible, along the way at least.
What you’ll learn during this episode:
So ― how do you kick some butt and become a Deep Worker??? Here are the top tips I’ve gathered from the book:
TIMESTAMPS:
The morphing of technology with humanity is not necessarily a good thing. [05:04]
Is commuting to work and school always best? [08:45]
The skillful management of attention is the key to living a good life. [10:04]
The idle mind tends to fixate on the negative. [13:12]
Schedule some time (actually use your calendar) an hour in the morning to work on highly cognitive demand tasks when you are most fresh. [15:18]
Be okay with annoying people by not responding immediately. Keep track of how you spend your time. [17:13]
Have the discipline to protect your time. Have a shut-down time as well. [19:03]
If you are going to wait around for inspiration to strike you like a lightning bolt, you’re going to be in the amateur division. [19:51]
LINKS:
QUOTES:

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