noah brier on stuff


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Dec 16, 2011
@ 6:00 pm
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Some more interesting data and thoughts on what people choose to read later from Nieman Journalism Lab. The gist: “But the evidence seems to be that people find time-shifting useful regardless of length, and that using these tools for really long work is more of an edge case than common usage. It appears the user’s thought process is closer to ‘Let me read this later” than “Let me read this later because it’s really long and worthy.’”
(via Is it just 8,000-word epics that make people hit “Read Later”? » Nieman Journalism Lab)

Some more interesting data and thoughts on what people choose to read later from Nieman Journalism Lab. The gist: “But the evidence seems to be that people find time-shifting useful regardless of length, and that using these tools for really long work is more of an edge case than common usage. It appears the user’s thought process is closer to ‘Let me read this later” than “Let me read this later because it’s really long and worthy.’”

(via Is it just 8,000-word epics that make people hit “Read Later”? » Nieman Journalism Lab)

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