qbit@bookwyrm.social reviewed Digital Minimalism by Cal Newport
Great book
5 stars
Has me re-thinking a lot of my relationships with tech.
Paperback
English language
Published Aug. 22, 2020
Learn how to switch off and find calm.
Do you find yourself endlessly scrolling through social media or the news while your anxiety rises? Are you feeling frazzled after a long day of long video calls?
In this timely book, professor Cal Newport shows us how to pair back digital distractions and live a more meaningful life with less technology.
By following a 'digital declutter' process, you'll learn to: · Rethink your relationship with social media · Prioritize 'high bandwidth' conversations over low quality text chains · Rediscover the pleasures of the offline world
Take back control from your devices and find calm amongst the chaos with Digital Minimalism.
Has me re-thinking a lot of my relationships with tech.
Some ideas are impractical for small spaces, like crafting physical objects of high quality use and beauty, and others are impractical for when social distancing is a survival skill. I was surprised to learn Dr. Newport is a computer science professor. Nonetheless, I did glean useful ideas to implement to move more of my time toward high-value activities. This book came out years ago and the Social Media 2.0 behemoths' actions selling us to their revenue sources are glaringly apparent now: Twitter refusing to make 'show latest tweets' permanently adjustable, Google introducing opt-out notifications on Android phones. They don't want us to have the control we had three years ago, a month ago, even, as long as we use them.
The electronic version is structured oddly, over a dozen pages at the end, one footnote per page. I was astonished to have reached 'Conclusion' at 73% completion.
If I had finished this back when I started (2019) I would have lived it. Now, in 2021, a lot of what Newport talks about seems like common sense. Beyond the advice, the anecdotes of the digital minimalists that he encountered while preparing this book are à propos and well-chosen to highlight the underlying call to action: quit faffing around on your phone, stop with the constant Facebooking, put your phone down and do something else that keeps your hands busy or puts you in a social situation.
[Warning: I'm not going to painstakingly edit this review, as I would normally.]
I read this close on the heels (2+ weeks) of "How to Break Up with Your Phone" by Catherine Price, which I read to be companionable in an online reading group. I rated it 3-minus. I'm not really the target for either book—I'm already pretty mindful of how I use my tools and spend my precious resources.
The Price book was brief and mainly instructional. I took a couple tips from it, but hardly followed the 30-day process.
Reading this book made me think of how much I dislike Charles Dickens' writing. There's clearly merit; but, Newport (like Dickens) takes forever and a day to say something that could have been handled admirably in much less time.
I was irritated (to put it kindly) at Newport's inability to recognize that people have different communication styles. [Comment inspired …
[Warning: I'm not going to painstakingly edit this review, as I would normally.]
I read this close on the heels (2+ weeks) of "How to Break Up with Your Phone" by Catherine Price, which I read to be companionable in an online reading group. I rated it 3-minus. I'm not really the target for either book—I'm already pretty mindful of how I use my tools and spend my precious resources.
The Price book was brief and mainly instructional. I took a couple tips from it, but hardly followed the 30-day process.
Reading this book made me think of how much I dislike Charles Dickens' writing. There's clearly merit; but, Newport (like Dickens) takes forever and a day to say something that could have been handled admirably in much less time.
I was irritated (to put it kindly) at Newport's inability to recognize that people have different communication styles. [Comment inspired by this: “When someone instigates a low-quality connection—say a text message conversation or social media ping—suggest they call or meet you during your office hours sometime when it is convenient for them.”] If you want to share discussion on this topic, I'd be happy to . . . but don't call me!
I can agree with this conclusion (maybe I should have skipped to the last page at the start): "Digital minimalists see new technologies as tools to be used to support things they deeply value, not as sources of value themselves. They don't accept the idea that offering some small benefit is justification for allowing an attention-gobbling service into their lives, and are instead interested in applying new technology in highly selective and intentional ways that yield big wins."
Overall, the book is long on extended anecdotes about famous historical figures' habits of solitude and judgment on what constitutes meaningful experiences and communication, and short on substantive advice on how to use new technologies as useful tools vs. mindless time-sucks.
[Warning: I'm not going to painstakingly edit this review, as I would normally.]
I read this close on the heels (2+ weeks) of "How to Break Up with Your Phone" by Catherine Price, which I read to be companionable in an online reading group. I rated it 3-minus. I'm not really the target for either book—I'm already pretty mindful of how I use my tools and spend my precious resources.
The Price book was brief and mainly instructional. I took a couple tips from it, but hardly followed the 30-day process.
Reading this book made me think of how much I dislike Charles Dickens' writing. There's clearly merit; but, Newport (like Dickens) takes forever and a day to say something that could have been handled admirably in much less time.
I was irritated (to put it kindly) at Newport's inability to recognize that people have different communication styles. [Comment inspired …
[Warning: I'm not going to painstakingly edit this review, as I would normally.]
I read this close on the heels (2+ weeks) of "How to Break Up with Your Phone" by Catherine Price, which I read to be companionable in an online reading group. I rated it 3-minus. I'm not really the target for either book—I'm already pretty mindful of how I use my tools and spend my precious resources.
The Price book was brief and mainly instructional. I took a couple tips from it, but hardly followed the 30-day process.
Reading this book made me think of how much I dislike Charles Dickens' writing. There's clearly merit; but, Newport (like Dickens) takes forever and a day to say something that could have been handled admirably in much less time.
I was irritated (to put it kindly) at Newport's inability to recognize that people have different communication styles. [Comment inspired by this: “When someone instigates a low-quality connection—say a text message conversation or social media ping—suggest they call or meet you during your office hours sometime when it is convenient for them.”] If you want to share discussion on this topic, I'd be happy to . . . but don't call me!
I can agree with this conclusion (maybe I should have skipped to the last page at the start): "Digital minimalists see new technologies as tools to be used to support things they deeply value, not as sources of value themselves. They don't accept the idea that offering some small benefit is justification for allowing an attention-gobbling service into their lives, and are instead interested in applying new technology in highly selective and intentional ways that yield big wins."
Overall, the book is long on extended anecdotes about famous historical figures' habits of solitude and judgment on what constitutes meaningful experiences and communication, and short on substantive advice on how to use new technologies as useful tools vs. mindless time-sucks.