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Joe Kraus on how we are creating a culture of distraction and the repercussions.

Joe Kraus on how we are creating a culture of distraction and the repercussions.

Three Themes:

1. We are creating and encouraging a culture of distraction where we are increasingly disconnected from the people and events around us and increasingly unable to engage in long-form thinking. People now feel anxious when their brains are unstimulated.

2. We are losing some very important things by doing this. We threaten the key ingredients behind creativity and insight by filling up all our “gap” time with stimulation. And we inhibit real human connection when we prioritize our phones over our the people right in front of us.

3. What can we do about it? Is this path inevitable or can balance be restored?

8:55 PM Jun 07 2012

Props Given By:

ifindkarmatowfiqdanikaliveink

Are you happy with your relationship with your phone?

"If I let it, it fills up every gap in my day."

And yet, the more we multitask, the worse we get at multitasking.

10:11 PM Jun 07 2012

Props Given By:

liveink

i love this video

4:47 PM Jun 09 2012

Props Given By:

ifindkarma

I love this video too, Kevin.

Every Sunday reminds me of it.

3:57 PM Jun 10 2012

Props Given By:

liveink

Addiction to mobile devices is an ongoing theme on PandaWhale.

1:06 PM Jul 25 2012

Props Given By:

liveink

"We are lonely but fearful of intimacy. Digital connections offer the illusion of companionship without the demands of friendship. We expect more from our technology and less from each other." ~Sherry Turkle, MIT

For more, watch: http://www.ted.com/talks/sherry_turkle_alone_together.html

10:11 PM Jun 07 2012

Props Given By:

bakadesuyo

At first I was disappointed to see this video was fifteen minutes long.

But I'm glad I sat through it all.

Putting down the smartphones and the tablets -- all the technology -- has to be a conscious decision.

The reward for successfully doing so, is FOCUS.

11:29 PM Jun 07 2012

Props Given By:

Ottway

Worth watching again.

I'm pretty sure I will be unable to take a day a week off from the devices since my livelihood depends on them right now.

Seems like a good future goal.

8:28 AM Jun 08 2012

To stop "rubbing glass" so much, steps I had already taken on my android:

* disabled push mail for gmail and exchange, settings sync times to 1hr

* disabled notification for any email

* removed all annoying push-based apps (such as voxer)

This removes a lot of the need to check for updates.

With Joe's talk as inspiration I'm making an effort towards starting the day with mindful habits instead of spending the first 15-30 minutes of each morning glued to my phone.

A couple years ago I went without a smart phone for a few months. Not having camera, maps and turn-by-turn was frustrating enough to go back to android.

12:01 PM Jun 08 2012

Props Given By:

ifindkarmabakadesuyo

The key is to eliminate notifications.

Only check email/texts/voicemails twice a day, and otherwise steer clear of notifications.

And then there are actual productivity rituals.

@bakadesuyo says one 18 minute ritual every day can make you more productive.

See also my productivity stash.

6:34 PM Jun 08 2012

Really? Think again Adam... (-:

Adam while it does seem impossible, that's the whole point of the talk I think.

At any point in our careers we can always convince ourselves that that specific point in time in your career / 'livelihood' depends on being hyper connected and you just don't have a day or half a day you can unplug.

Now it is the critical pre-funding stage of the start-up, later it is the critical launch, still later it is the critical growth phase and then in some time hopefully you have taken it public and are dealing with even larger problems... (-:

So this is our classic excuse and frankly I don't think it is good enough. (-:

And yes, I am well aware, I am point a finger at you and the remaining four are pointing back at me. :-P

11:52 PM Jun 08 2012

Props Given By:

ifindkarma

No startup lasts a long time in the grand scheme of things.

So to give your startup your primary focus is a good thing, I believe.

When you're not in "startup mode" I totally agree, Ashish.

6:23 AM Jun 09 2012

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