An Analog Feedreader Based on Books
Do you have a pile of books that you've been meaning to finish for years? Or do you use a feedreader like Google Reader but keep running out of feed items (emptyfeedreaderitis)? If so, then the analog feedreader is for you.
What you'll need:
This is a bookmark with single-line resolution – i.e., it allows you to precisely mark the line at which you left off your reading:
Next, choose up to 5 books to put in your feedreader. Here's what I chose:
Enclose the books with the two book-ends. Place the feedreader in a conspicuous location, perhaps beside your computer:
Now, whenever you have a free moment, or need a break, or run out of items on your regular feedreader, read a paragraph or a page from the books in your analog feedreader. Move the bookmarks to indicate the line at which you left off.
There are a lot of great things about analog feedreaders:
What you'll need:
- A bunch of books (no more than 5)
- 5 index cards
- Two book-ends
This is a bookmark with single-line resolution – i.e., it allows you to precisely mark the line at which you left off your reading:
Next, choose up to 5 books to put in your feedreader. Here's what I chose:
Enclose the books with the two book-ends. Place the feedreader in a conspicuous location, perhaps beside your computer:
Now, whenever you have a free moment, or need a break, or run out of items on your regular feedreader, read a paragraph or a page from the books in your analog feedreader. Move the bookmarks to indicate the line at which you left off.
There are a lot of great things about analog feedreaders:
- You will be making progress on books that you have been putting off.
- You will be peppering your week with small doses of new ideas.
- Unlike traditional feedreaders, this feedreader never runs out of items. I won't get into it here, but this is because it uses a static corpus rather than a dynamic corpus. Thus, it does not suffer from the emptyfeedreaderitis mentioned at the beginning.
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