120 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
120 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2477
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Title: HPR2477: Reading Audio Books While Distracted
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2477/hpr2477.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 03:50:05
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---
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This is HPR episode 2477 entitled Reading Audio Books While Distracted.
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It is hosted by Nodamid and in about 10 minutes long, and carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is my attempt to solve the problem of listening to audio books when you can't
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fully concentrate.
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Today's show is licensed under a CC hero license.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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At Universal Access to All Knowledge, by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hello, this is Diodidi Dummy with another episode for Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm recording this because I've stumbled upon something I think might be interesting
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or useful to this crowd in particular.
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So basically the problem is that I'm going to talk about is how to watch or how to listen
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to audio books and maybe in a podcast as well while at work.
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I don't mean to kind of work that's dangerous where you shouldn't be listening to something,
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but the kind of work where there's nothing preventing you from listening to things, but
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the work is distracting.
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So if you're like me, you may be tried to do this in the past and you'll find that you
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get through a book and or get so far in there and then you're like, oh, I don't remember
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anything of that.
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So it's frustrating and you don't want to listen to the whole book again, so you end
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up just listening to music maybe so that it's not as important to you that you pay attention.
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So that's a situation I'm talking about.
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Well, I recently decided to take a look at that listening to audio books while I'm at
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work because what I found there's a lot of books that I want to read and I don't really
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have time to sit down and read, but I do have lots of times that I can listen, but the
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problem is I can't always concentrate.
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So I decided to take a look at that and see if I could break that into kind of treat
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that like a regular problem and see if there were any solutions.
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And what I didn't do, so maybe this is a technique that's well known and I'm an idiot,
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but I didn't Google this to see if other people have some ideas.
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So it just came to me kind of, anyways, I kind of do that a lot.
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I'll think about a problem first before I go looking for a solution.
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If it's a kind of problem that I kind of want to think about on my own was I do that
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sometimes.
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If it's usually if it's something I just need an answer to or I'm pretty sure there's
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no way I would know the answer or be able to figure the answer out in a reasonable amount
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of time, then I'll automatically search for it.
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But if it's a problem that I think is interesting, the problem itself or I just want to amend
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the mood to just think about something, then I'll try to solve it on my own or at least
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think about it for a while before I go searching and that's what I did in this case.
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So with books, I just kind of broke this into things, right?
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So into the different ways you can listen to audio books.
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And so for me in particular, I usually have two kind of formats.
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One is the whole book at once and the other is chapter by chapter.
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So that's the kind of format that I had.
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And then the other thing is, well, that was really it.
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And so what I thought was maybe if I could, I thought about it and then the other thing
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that I came into my mind is to a way to actually, on the player, how to listen to them.
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And so for example, there's at full speed or sped up and I decided that I didn't really
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try sped up because I don't.
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If I'm concentrating then, like if I'm walking around and I'm not really doing anything
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else aside from walking around, then I like to do things at full speed or maybe if I'm
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on the public transport or driving in the car, then sped up is fine because then I'm
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kind of focused and paying attention and the speed doesn't hurt me.
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But in those situations, I don't have a need to, I don't have this problem because I'm
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paying attention.
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So I decided to kind of dismiss the idea of it kind of ruled out reading them sped
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up right off the path.
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And then the other way is to, like I'm a player, I can loop through with the files, I can
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loop through all, loop through one, loop, you know, or just play them one time through.
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So what I thought might be interesting, and so the problem that I have too is, well,
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so what I thought I would do is break things up into chunks and then if I had to go back
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because I missed basically the whole point of whatever I'm listening to, then it wouldn't
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be so bad if I had to went through, you know, a certain number, you know, smaller volume,
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if I had to repeat that, I wouldn't have wasted as much time.
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So I started off with reading three chapters, listening to three chapters at a time and
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then I found out that, you know, I just did it kind of as best I could, not only while
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I was doing something else, and I found at the end of the three chapters, again, I missed
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a lot and also some of the things that I heard in the first chapter or the third chapter
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were kind of spoilers for the first chapter and I didn't really get the first chapter properly
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so that was kind of a bummer. So then I, so that was, it worked pretty well because I got
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like the, I got the, it worked pretty well. After I looked through again, I was paying attention
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more and I got more, I mean, I got more out of it, I think, then if I would have read
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the whole, listen to the whole book at once, but it wasn't still quite, something didn't
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really seem good satisfying about it so then I just decided, well, I would listen chapter
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by chapter and if I go chapter by chapter, then I can kind of move, kind of along with
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the author once, because if you know, he's kind of chapter by chapter, I can kind of take
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those as my logical unit of work and then it would be smaller chunks that would be repeating
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and if I didn't, if I got through a whole chapter without needing to repeat anything
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because I felt, felt like I caught everything, then then there would be less that I would
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be repeating. For example, if I, if I would listen into, you know, three chapter chunks
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and I had to repeat, I'd repeat repeating chapters, you know, the chapter, the first chapter
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every time, even though I, you know, I got the gist of the first chapter. So, so I tried
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that and it seemed to have worked pretty well. I listened to the triplanetary that way and
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one of the HBR book club books and I felt pretty good about it. I'm going to listen to
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a couple more before I kind of, you know, fully decide, but I think this, this method
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worked pretty good. So, just to recap, what seems to work well for me is play, play
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books chapter by chapter on a loop, one chapter looping at a time and then once I feel like,
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I mean, there's no, I guess, objective way to do this, but once I feel like I got the
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chapter, then I'll skip to the next chapter and again, loop that one chapter over and
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over until I, until I get through the book and, you know, it takes longer to get through
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a book this way, but I feel like the, I got, you know, I got some halfway decent comprehension,
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I got the story and the extra time would have just been spent listening to music,
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or maybe podcasts that I didn't care if I kind of missed the point of the podcast.
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So, I don't feel like the extra time was valuable time. I mean, listening to music can be valuable,
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but you know, it didn't help me get through the books that I wanted to, that I want to get
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through and so, yeah, so this seems like a reasonable approach and if it works well,
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I think I might do this with podcasts to split them up into, you know, run it through a program
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that will split them up into chunks of a certain length because I have the same issue with podcast.
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I don't usually care so much if I don't listen to a whole podcast or I miss the meeting,
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but there are some that would be nice, but so, yeah, this is something you might be,
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might check out if you have the same problem. If you do, let us know how it worked for you.
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That's all.
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You've been listening to heckaPublicRadio at heckaPublicRadio.org.
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We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday.
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HeckaPublicRadio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club
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and is part of the binary revolution at binwreff.com.
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leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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