Accelerating speed of information delivery and communications

Telegraph
A lot has changed since the civil war in the United States when the principal means of long distance communications was the telegraph. Newspapers took days to get the news into the hands of the citizenry and information traveled slowly.

Compare that with what we’re dealing with today: hundreds of TV channels; newspapers; magazines; web sites; and now the river of news and information that is streaming toward us helped along by the Internet and really simple syndication (RSS).

Most of yesterday I was tied up and got back to my office about 5:30pm and discovered 1,749 feeds in my RSS reader! Not all of these posts and articles are relevant or interesting, but scanning them is still important since every single day I pull a dozen or so into my saved articles for future reference or because they inform something.

Add to that email, SMS, instant messaging, voicemails, the newspapers I read and the shows I TiVo, the DVD’s I receive by mail, the podcasts I subscribe to, the music I own and continue to purchase, the five or six books I have going at any given time, and even *I* start to chuckle at the deluge of information that comes my way.

This is after I’ve been pretty rigorous about unsubscribing to feeds, podcasts and email newsletters, letting print publication subscriptions lapse, and deleting the recording of TV content I don’t care about any longer.

Here’s the kicker: about as fast as I push stuff away, new opportunities pop up. There are new online video sites I want to go to, Facebook apps to try out, new communications methods to explore and other bloggers with interesting things to say. More and more of my friends and colleagues want to reach out to me with alternative forms of communications and are asking me to join all sorts of new offerings.

How are you managing your tsunami of accelerating communications? This is only going to become a bigger issue and I need to figure out better ways to manage my information delivery and communications with better tools and approaches.