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Resource Overload

August 12, 2009 at 1:10 pm

I love Digg, Smashing Magazine, Vandelay Design, Tuts+, and many more sites that offer web design resources. They always have great articles on techniques and examples, and I learn something from them every day.

I only have one complaint about these sites, and it’s not necessarily a bad thing: I feel that they offer too much information in each post.

Take, for example, the front page of Digg’s Design section this morning:

resource-overload-digg

The most popular articles are collections of 40 or 50 links. If each link is a tutorial, and I’m interested in just 10% of the links, it could take me a couple of days to run through them. Before I’m done with the tutorials from one collection, another site has posted another list of 40–50. It’s very easy to feel overwhelmed by the sheer amount of information that is out there.

By comparison, take a look at A List Apart’s front page from the same day:

resource-overload-alistapart

ALA’s format is a bit different; every few weeks they post 2 articles on design theory or technique. This approach is more relaxed; visitors can focus on articles at their leisure before new content is posted. When I read something on A List Apart, I can be sure that the content will be well-researched, well-edited, and very useful; I don’t get the same assurance from the 31st tutorial in a list of 50.

So, how can you manage resource overload? You may be a better multitasker than me, so you might not even consider overload to be a problem. But if you do, here are some suggestions:

  1. Keep a list of bookmarked tutorials/articles that you want to read. Check them off as you finish them, and don’t be afraid to prune the list if it gets too long.
  2. When you find an interesting article, skim through it first to make sure it’s worth your time. If it doesn’t look like a high-quality resource, move on to something else.
  3. Focus on sites that provide links to high-quality content. It’s easy to find sites that aggregate links simply to generate ad revenue; these sites usually have no quality control and aren’t that helpful.

And remember, you don’t have to learn everything when you see it. It’s more important to be aware of what’s out there so you can find it when you do need it.

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Filed under Design, Development | 3 Comments »

Comments

  1. shannon says:

    i have this problem; i often tweet “the interwebz is friggin’ me out!” just because i have so much i want to read/look at. i’ve got 20 tabs open at any given time. a suggestion i have as well that i’ve included in my workflow is instapaper.com it’s great and i love it even more because i can add it to my RSS reader (NetNewsWire; which is even more wonderful now that it syncs with Google Reader). i’m glad i’m not the only one with this problem of ‘Resource Overload’ :)

  2. John says:

    Nice article. I thougt about it some days before and stopped retweeting everything that just seems to be interessting.

    bye,
    john

  3. Mirko says:

    True story. The overwhelming amount is the reason why I spend more time managing my feeds and bookmarks than actual reading them. On the other hand much(!) of the information is redundant and so I hit the “mark all as read”-button after some short scanning without regret.
    But I’m happy that there’s ALA. I really like this kind of approach.

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