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The Epidemic of Digital Distraction

asto21 writes "Almost no one does just one thing anymore. The screens won't let us. And in an incredible burst of human evolution, our minds have grown accustomed to monitoring multiple inputs at once. Yeah, you're reading this post. But we're nearly three paragraphs in. So if you're anything like me, it's about that time to check Twitter, count the additions to your Google Plus circles, read a handful of new incoming email messages, and chime in on a couple of ongoing instant message conversations. But are we paying less attention to important details?"

2 of 159 comments (clear)

  1. which is funnier by gEvil+(beta) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But we're nearly three paragraphs in.

    I'm not sure which is funnier -- that the sentence was left in the /. summary, or that it appears in the fourth paragraph of TFA.

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    This guy's the limit!
  2. Wish I could mod Slashdot stories themselves by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This one deserves "-1, self-delusional" if anything does.

    People haven't evolved to efficiently handle multiple inputs at once. The linked story certainly makes that statement, but provides absolutely no supporting evidence. If anything, it demonstrates the opposite with lines such as this: "It's getting harder to concentrate on anything, even the stuff that's clearly the most important." The poorly-written anecdotes don't show the author or his friends dealing well with all these inputs - they demonstrate the difficulty all parties are having coping. Another example is the part about his novelist friends who've removed all internet access from their homes because otherwise they can't concentrate on their work.

    Frankly, most of the article reads like - at best - a Readers' Digest submission. But it is Gizmodo, so there you go.

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    #DeleteChrome