“when I realize I’ve done too much e-mailing”
Sylvia Boorstein writes in Mindful (a new magazine that shows lots of promise) about e-mail: Every e-mail I receive from my friend and colleague Donald Rothberg starts with
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Skip to contentSylvia Boorstein writes in Mindful (a new magazine that shows lots of promise) about e-mail: Every e-mail I receive from my friend and colleague Donald Rothberg starts with
Hachette has put a bit of my December talk online:
Jon Mitchell (who wrote a nice piece on Digital Detox) on "How to Train Your Internet Friends:" The problem here at the dawn of the Information Age is
I can't go, as I've got to get things together for my Seattle talk and have a day job, but this conference on email actually looks quite good,
Following my post last night about the irony of "addicting" social media, I ran across this piece asking "Is email evil?" It poses the Kevin Kelly-like question, what
BBC Future has a pretty decent "psychological self-defence course" to avoid email overload: Here’s a pretty safe assumption to make: you probably feel like you’re inundated with email,
A couple months ago I deleted Facebook and Twitter from my iPhone. I was going through a "get rid of digital clutter" phase, and had already taken myself
Jordan Weissmann at the Atlantic catches a new report on office work:There's a good chance you spend more than a quarter of each week reading and answering those
Indicative of the times we live in: the Email Charter. We're drowning in email. And the many hours we spend on it are generating ever more work for
UCI researchers Gloria Mark and Stephen Voida, and Army researcher Armand Cardello, conducted a study of email use in the workplace, and found what should surprise no one: