Apr 30 2007

Declaring Email and RSS Feed Bankruptcy

Published by at 7:03 pm under blogging,random,Ultimate Guide to Productivity

Following on from yesterday’s Ultimate Guide to (un) Productivity, I have had an extremely productive day, and feel really good about that :) Baby steps.

An article today in the SMH rang a bell with me (my husband Theo pointed it out).

It’s what I did inadvertently with my Google reader the other day. I was in “list view” and instead of hitting “refresh”, I hit “mark all as read” OOPS! There goes 100+ unread posts in a folder. After momentary panic, I realised it felt good! So I went through my other folders, skimming the headlines, reading those that jumped out at me, and then was absolutely ruthless with the “mark all as read” button (don’t worry – I’m sure your post was one of the ones I read 😉 ).

It felt somewhat liberating to start from scratch again! So I can relate to this quote

“I am so far behind on email that I am declaring bankruptcy,” New York-based venture capitalist Fred Wilson wrote in his blog last week.

“If you’ve sent me an email (and you aren’t my wife, partner, or colleague), you might want to send it again. I am starting over.”

I tend to stay on top of my email, and I move emails that require action into a “TO DO” folder.

Anyway, have a look at Under Seige, Users Declare Email Bankruptcy.

The term “email bankruptcy” was coined by Stanford Law School professor Lawrence Lessig in 2004, when he was inundated with an average of 200 non-spam emails a day and had spent 80 hours in a week sorting through unanswered email.

Have you ever declared email or RSS Feed Bankruptcy?

11 responses so far

11 Responses to “Declaring Email and RSS Feed Bankruptcy”

  1. Isoliomon 30 Apr 2007 at 8:56 pm

    http://pressposts.com/Blogging/Declaring-Email-RSS-Feed-Bankruptcy/

    Submited post – “Declaring Email and RSS Feed Bankruptcy – Following on from yesterday’s Ultimate Guide to (un) Productivity, I have had an extremely productive day, and feel really good about that Baby…”

  2. Gregon 30 Apr 2007 at 9:11 pm

    No so far this week but the week is still young!

    More than once i have given up trying to read everything and just scanned headlines for what i need.

  3. Megon 30 Apr 2007 at 9:17 pm

    Hi Greg

    Hehe :)

    In this day and age wouldn’t you agree that it’s too easy to suffer from “information overload”. You simply HAVE to be selective.

  4. Andyon 03 May 2007 at 11:10 pm

    heheh I’m replying to this 3 days late because I only just read it in my RSS reader – 100+ items in Google Reader :)

    Problem is I’m finding the odd gem amongst the rubbish, there’s no way I would consider marking all as read…too much of a perfectionist!

  5. Megon 03 May 2007 at 11:14 pm

    Hi Andy

    Now THAT is ironic 😉 Be ruthless – I dare you!

  6. Lavenderon 07 Sep 2007 at 4:20 pm

    Onya! Thanks for making me feel better about jettisoning a load of unread items too – I felt really bad that Id miss commenting on some of my fave blogs – but there was just no way to recover the time – so good for you, & me too.
    Cheers!

  7. Megon 07 Sep 2007 at 4:55 pm

    Lavender – just getting to it now. How liberating!

  8. Sephy's Platzishon 25 Sep 2007 at 3:14 pm

    Improving your Google Reader Experience…

    Over the last few weeks, one thing that would keep me from actually reading blogs was the way I was reading them. For as long as I can remember, my Google Reader just read “100+” for the number of unr……

  9. […] had reached, as Meg puts it, “feed bankruptcy,” something she’s had to redeclare recently. I was missing lots of items in my feeds, […]

  10. […] RSS reader is over flowing. Apologies to all who I haven’t visited. Time to declare RSS bankruptcy again (except for your posts, okay […]

  11. […] slowly start to resume, but I may not catch up on responding to all the comments and I may need to declare feed bankruptcy. I’m still busy organising things and settling in to my new job, so it will still be slow for […]