DISQUS

The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss: How Scoble Reads 622 RSS Feeds Each Morning

  • K · 2 years ago
    This seems totally ANTITHETICAL to the low-information diet. It appears this dude is devouring information in the same manner in which a person might try drinking from a fire hose.

    Tim's approach is MUCH better.
  • Tim Ferriss · 2 years ago
    Hi K,

    It is pretty overwhelming to even imagine! That said, there a few things that make Robert quite different from most of us: 1) It is his job to aggregate, filter, and interpret tons of news. His inbox is thus his workspace, whereas it is used by most people (my former self included) to avoid doing work; 2) He enjoys being an early adopter (if not the earliest), connecting the dots before anyone else, and otherwise being on the information cutting edge. He really loves the constant connectivity! Just check out how many Twitter friends he has. It's mind-blowing.

    There is no need for most people to consume as much information as Robert does. It would be just as you said, like drinking from a fire hydrant. His techniques and coping mechanisms, however, are ultra-refined and perfect for average Joe and Jane.

    Me personally? I know this will seem like sacrilege, but I don't even currently use an RSS reader! It still helps me to know how he thinks about filtering information, though. As you'll see in Part II, the philosophies and principles can be applied all over the place.

    Thanks for contributing to the conversation!

    Tim
  • Sarah · 2 years ago
    Hi Tim,

    A good set of questions! It's interesting to hear how Robert does manage all his feeds. He seems to have a very similar approach to them as I do, however I tend to go through a series of culling of my feeds at regular intervals. The funny thing is that I removed Roberts blog from my feeds list because his personal interests are very different to mine, but I do have a number of the same blogs on my feed list as he has on his link bloog. (Sorry Robert... I do pop over there from time to time if I see someone linking to you though!)

    Good choice of video host too! I quite like Viddler because if the ability to tag the data. We use it for the Girl Geek Dinners videos.

    I wonder what would happen with Robert if we disconnected him from the internet for a few weeks... ;) I did it for a week not so long ago and it was an interesting experience, but it was hard work catching up with all the e-mails and everything afterwards.

    If you ever happen to pop to London and fancy talking at one of our events then do let me know. We'd love to have you talk.

    Sarah
  • Chris Sherrod · 2 years ago
    It's good to know that I process information much the same way.

    The video was helpful in how he processed the information.
  • Dan · 2 years ago
    I suspect you have a cunning plan...
  • Tim Walker · 2 years ago
    Good interview, Tim. I met Robert at SXSWi this year (but I was trapped at work when you were making your presentation - Aargh!) and found him to be just as nice as you say. For a while I resisted subscribing to his Google Reader links postings, but now I find that scanning them is a great way for me to sail through a lot of interesting/job-related tech stuff that I might miss otherwise.

    Also, I like how you make the point that, for Robert, a constant high dose of information is what juices him up. For me, one of the takeaways from your book is that each of us should *reflect* on our own *appropriate* levels of work, information, etc. For folks wired like Robert, those levels may be high; for many of us, they'll be much lower. But there's no single definition that works for everybody - we each have to find it for ourselves.

    Anyway, keep up the good work!
  • Markus Merz · 2 years ago
    May I recommend BlogBridge as my preferred RSS reader for such masses of feeds.
  • Mark · 2 years ago
    I know he's using Google Reader's "share" button to add items to his link blog, but I wish you would've discussed how he organizes the ideas he gets when he sees an interesting post. How's he logging his ideas? What (if any) cool hacks is he using to start posting and linking based on what he's read. That sort of thing.

    The first part of the interview (imprinting, etc.) was really interesting though. Glad you did it.
  • Russell · 2 years ago
    enjoyed the video... interesting to see someone in the process of processing all that information, but get a wide angle lens on that camera for up close shots...
  • Chris · 2 years ago
    Mastering the Low-Information Diet

    After reading Tim’s book I just started this week my new low-information diet cold turkey. I set up a virtual newsstand with the new feature, iGoogle (it’s now my start up page). I have set up a quick summary page of RSS feeds, del.icio.us feeds and newspaper feeds. I can browse the headlines in less than 30 seconds. iGoogle makes it real easy to setup and do. If I want to read it later, I just del.icio.us it and read it on my “free day.�
  • Hugh "Nomad" Hancock · 2 years ago
    I'd love to view this (and I'm enjoying the site as a whole - great articles!), but unfortunately

    a) the site's laggy as hell for me, and the video's stopping every 10 seconds.

    b) The viewer that Viddler uses seems not to cache the video once it's downloaded, so I can't do my normal YouTube "fix" of letting the video run through once, jerkily, in the background, and then playing it once it's fully downloaded. If I try that with Viddler, it just starts buffering again from the point I rewind to - and so I can't watch the video at all without it stuttering.

    I know you can't do anything about a), which may well be my local connection anyway. But b) is a bit of a problem...

    Sorry my first post's a complaint, but the video looks really interesting!
  • Christian Tietze · 2 years ago
    I personally really like this kind of content. Although you don't blog that much every week, mixing in a video like this spices your posts up a lot.
    Hmm... realizing where current technology is leading to (I never thought about videos or multimedia on the web a lot) I just can't help but smile :) What world of possibilities we live in!
  • Sean · 2 years ago
    For me things like PopUrls are the best solution. I've even considered doing a PopUrls clone solely for personal use with the feeds I like. It's perfect because I can log on, click on a few interesting things, and log off.

    I find RSS feeds to be overwhelming as well. My job isn't to blog like Scoble. By the time everything else is done even an hour digging through feeds is a pain. I don't mind missing a few little things here and there, so with a PopUrls-esque solution I'm only seeing the last 20 bits of any feed and it doesn't pile up in an RSS inbox. Just having that little reminder that there's hundreds of unread items makes me feel buried, and 95% of it is destined for deletion anyway.
  • Jauder Ho · 2 years ago
    I actually read much the same way. I've always been able to scan fairly quickly so that definitely helps. I too use Google Reader although it would be nice if out the box, the window dressing consumes less real estate (I know about the various plugins) and if there was a nice way to split personal and work feeds.

    So the read sequence is as follows (using GReader and Firefox):

    1. Open GReader.
    2. Scan through articles using 'j' or 'k'.
    3. Interesting articles get opened in a seperate tab via 'v'
    4. Things I want to keep track of get the star. This can happen either as I scan the article ('s')and already know it's a keeper or I'll leave the article unread ('m') if it's a maybe and go back to star the article if I decide to after reading it in its entirety.

    This lets me minimize the amount of time taken to read and I average 100-400 articles a day this way (calculated via trends).
  • Ernie Oporto · 2 years ago
    If your job is reading blogs, then it becomes easier to dedicate a morning to reading blogs. I find that Google Reader is just too darn slow for scanning headlines, and frankly if the headline doesn't grab you, it proabaly wasn't interesting. Besides, there are so many memes that are reblogged, that if you don't catch it in one blog, another will surely have a grabber headline that gets you into the story. That said, there are so many things that are reblogged that you HAVE to scan headlines to get past it all. To process feeds quickly, scanning headlines is the way to go, not looking at bodies of articles.

    I use a reader like MonkeyChow ( http://www.shokk.com/blog/articles/category/mon... ) on my own server (LAMP) so that I don't have to rely on Google's erratic feed updating. It also features search, a river of news view and allows you to reblog things into your own RSS feed and share your OPML for the whole bunch or a tagged group. You can also "star" stuff to bookmark it for later. Most options are use configurable to suit your taste. As for keyboard use for viewing the page, Page Up and Page Down work really well! I'm going through 200 feeds, but can cut through to the good stuff right away. A lot of it is feeds for software releases that I might need to update at home or on the work network and which do not update frequently. But some of them are prolific bloggers that spray content all day long.

    Anyway, the old way of doing this stuff was through mailing lists, and just the portion of my feeds that involve keeping up to date with technology would be totally out of control if I were to continue with that. RSS is perfectly suited for the one-way broadcast that the web was become these days. Thank goodness for RSS in making my day more efficient.
  • Brian Heys · 2 years ago
    I couldn't help but notice Scoble has a copy of 'Founders At Work' by Jessica Livingston on his desk. That's a cool book. I'm eating it up at the moment, and loving every minute.

    Essential reading for anyone interested in the Silicon Valley startup culture.
  • Beeler Van Orman · 2 years ago
    Tim -

    I just finished reading your book yesterday. Well done, very inspiring and motivational. It's given me some good idea's for the time that lays ahead. Thanks for writing this, it was very positive reading your work. Keep the influence coming.

    Beeler Van Orman
  • Rob Stokes · 2 years ago
    Seems like a sweet vid Tim but I just can't watch it from down here in the 3rd world. I've been trying for the past week with no luck. The problem is that your video player won't allow me to load the whole video and then watch it from the beginning - it has to stream. This means that with our TERRIBLE South African bandwidth, this vid only plays in 1 second sound bytes every 20 seconds or so... pretty unusable.
    Do you perhaps have a line where i could download the video?

    Dig your blog.
    Rob

    Oh and PS, I think I track more feeds than Robert and couldn't do it without my custom FeedDemon config ;)
  • Jim Schafer · 2 years ago
    Tim -- another great post -- I really like your thinking. Could you possibly share the vendor that handles your calls from India/China? I want to start using someone like that and want to reach out to several vendor possibilities for quotes. Thanks and best of luck -- keep up the creative ideas -- they are great!
  • Tim Ferriss · 2 years ago
    Hi All,

    I'm really sorry for the lag with Viddler. Though I compressed the video to less than 100MB, it was over 10 minutes and couldn't be uploaded to YouTube. If you have any other suggestions, my ears are wide open. I would use the impressive Stage 6 (stage6.divx.com), but I'm lazy and don't want to convert to DivX format each time. Alternatives?

    Jim, I would love to share the outsourcing teams that I use, but here's the problem: they'd get overwhelmed and my work would suffer! Right now, my teams are mostly small (5-10), filtered and selected on Elance. Even GetFriday, which has done great work for me, is getting snowed under with work since their mentions in the book. The price of success! Be careful what you ask for ;)

    Good luck!

    Tim
  • jonah · 2 years ago
    The real question is why is he reading all those feeds?

    You, the author of Winning By Intimidation and many others have said, "Don't be an information junkie."

    So why encourage people to read 622 news feeds?
  • Robert Scoble · 2 years ago
    Jonah: YOU shouldn't read 622 feeds. You should only read one. One that's already been filtered to just the good stuff. I thought that was pretty well communicated by Tim and me.
  • Kevin Johnson · 2 years ago
    Tim,
    I heard a recording of a call via Robin Robins regarding your new book and I thank you for challenging me to rethink the way I conduct my daily life. I have ordered your book tonight. I also have signed up for Google Reader and I want to thank you for this interview with Robert.
    Kevin
  • gaurav · 2 years ago
    its to go through this page.....
  • tddpirate · 2 years ago
    How about publicizing a text transcript of the interview, for the benefit of the hearing impaired?
  • Mark Riffey · 2 years ago
    Tim,

    thanks for the interview, definitely some great takeaways there.

    One thing of note: Id turn off the little popup comment feature on the videos. All it does is give the negative nellies a way to distract from your message. Leave that to VH-1:)

    Mark
  • anon · 2 years ago
    Can we have the transcript of the interview please?
  • trademark registration · 2 years ago
    This is a very impressive post. Interesting to see how professional RSS-subscribers do things. This is extremely informative for those of us starting to use RSS feeds.
  • trademark registration · 2 years ago
    Very interesting post. It's great to know how a true professional manages RSS feeds. A great video for those barely starting out subscribing to RSS feeds.
  • Usenet Nut · 11 months ago
    Thanks a few interesting points there some good pointers for handling a large amount of internet data
  • Arun · 9 months ago
    I usually dont take this kind of personal branding and hero worship seriously. Reading 600+ RSS feeds is not much to be heaved about. I manage 150 RSS feeds, 200 domain content, visit a thousand web sites each day and answer forum posts and blog comments. I know many people who do more than me. While that is admirable, it is not that only Scoble has this so-called :"talent"