I've had a copy of this book for so long, but it reeks to me of something that should be a blog post I can read in 5 minutes, and so I've never been able to muster the interest to crack it open.
I find many "productivity" books tend be easily summarizable... but reading the book is really to drill the concept in your head so that you're conscious of the tips/advice in your day to day.
Plus, if you spread out the reading over a few days/weeks, you can apply what you've learned throughout the day as you read along.
wry_discontent|4 years ago
How seriously would you recommend it?
wheelinsupial|4 years ago
https://www.calnewport.com/blog/2012/11/21/knowledge-workers...
"Last week I introduced the deep work philosophy" in this blog post links to the one above: https://www.calnewport.com/blog/2012/11/27/some-notes-on-dee...
albertshin|4 years ago
Plus, if you spread out the reading over a few days/weeks, you can apply what you've learned throughout the day as you read along.
100011_100001|4 years ago
Work on one thing without distractions for big blocks of time, 1-4 hours. You will make great progress by concentrating on one thing at a time.
....there you have it
muzani|4 years ago
prepend|4 years ago
My takeaway was that I wasn’t crazy for only answering email every few hours and helped quell the anxiety that people “needed” my response.
xanaxagoras|4 years ago
rkhassen9|4 years ago