Comment author: RyanCarey 10 December 2012 11:57:17PM 1 point [-]

Hi all, Visiting from Australia, I'll be there! Got a start time?

Comment author: matias 11 December 2012 02:21:19PM 1 point [-]

2pm

Comment author: Alexei 28 November 2012 09:44:31AM 4 points [-]

Additional suggestion to follow after you created a policy: print it out, read it out loud in a solemn voice, sign it.

Comment author: matias 07 December 2012 04:46:59PM 3 points [-]

Ideally written out in blood with a quill that will show how serious you are.

Comment author: mathnerd314 01 December 2012 02:27:04PM *  4 points [-]

I look at it in terms of efficiency; sites like reddit are simply inefficient ways to communicate. They are good at making random connections and exploring new subject areas, and that is what I use them for: if I have heard of a subject, but don't know about it, I find a subreddit on the topic and subscribe.

As a tool for discourse, however, there is much to be desired; communication is lossy (many posts are simply not upvoted enough to be seen) and interspersed with noise (unrelated but "viral" posts). Google Reader is almost lossless; it maintains a buffer of all messages for 30 days and then archives them so that they are available in search results but not as unread items. If one reads every feed to its end at least once a month, then no data is lost.

Google Reader thus has the odd effect of making one commit; either you are subscribed to a feed, and read every post of it, or you are not, and never see it anywhere. I have not used Reader for more than a few years, and furthermore haven't conducted a survey of its users, but I would theorize that Reader users as a whole are more productive/active than non-users as a result. Perhaps it could be a question on the next LessWrong survey.

Comment author: matias 07 December 2012 04:46:14PM 1 point [-]

Assuming of course you use reddit for communication, for me it would be more about finding interesting pieces of information and seeing the analysis of other people, by the time I get to it most of the discussion has already occurred. For me personally Google Reader does not make more more productive, it is just another way to waste time.

Comment author: matias 06 December 2012 09:17:08AM 3 points [-]

I have exactly this problem and this is a good solution. So just to make it concrete if you want to block reddit as above I used the following..

Get Leechblock Add these into the specify site section +reddit.com/r reddit.com

So far this works well, I am not sure yet whether reddit puts anything in a different subdirectory.