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…in which, in an article on technology and gratification, I assure readers that I’m not a drunk

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00November 4th, 2013|Attention / Distraction, Contemplative computing, Media, Science, The Distraction Addiction|

The San Jose Mercury News is running a big series on how information technology is affecting modern life, and this weekend they had a long piece on gratification.

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“Abstinence is not an option. You’re better off teaching your kids how to use [technology] effectively”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00November 4th, 2013|Contemplative computing, Kids, Social media, Technology|

Mindful magazine has an interview with child and adolescent psychiatrist Tristan Gorrindo about teens and social media. It has a nice overview of how teenage social and neurological

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Clifford Nass

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00November 4th, 2013|Attention / Distraction|

Sad news that Clifford Nass, who did some of the most important recent work on computers and multitasking, and whose work on how we view computers influenced my

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The Distraction Addiction “brims with suggestions for how to embrace… a mindful approach to digital technology”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00October 21st, 2013|Media, The Distraction Addiction|

The October 28 issue of The New Yorker features a review by Evgeny Morozov of The Distraction Addiction, along with Dave Eggers' The Circle, Douglas Rushkoff's Future Shock,

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“often the best way to… persuade people… is by putting things down on paper in a kind of careful and deliberate way”

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00October 19th, 2013|Business and work, Contemplative computing, Email|

Supreme Court justices don't communicate with each other via email. Elena Kagan explains why: [Y]ou have to remember that the Court is an institution where...we're not horse trading.

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Rest is Not Idleness: John Lubbock, Charles Darwin, and the Value of Daydreams

By |2025-04-21T01:30:35-07:00October 18th, 2013|Attention / Distraction, Contemplative computing, History, The Distraction Addiction, Walking|

You should read this very interesting article about daydreaming by Jessica Lahey in the Atlantic. I’ve been reading about daydreaming extensively lately, and it has caused me regret

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