I usually come to work 15-20 mins early and start by bringing up 7 or so tabs in my browser. I'll browse for 10mins or so save any longer article I'm interested in for later.
Nothing beats this blog. My Computer Science knowledge has improved by leaps & bounds because of this one website alone. University education has failed me, I sometimes wonder! Adrian Colyer is a machine, though lately he has toned it down. 3-4 review/ week.
[2] arXiv
Only the Hardware Architecture and Emerging Technologies part.
HN, Twitter, Tildes, BBC News, The Guardian and then The Telegraph (these two to try to balance each of them out a bit), The Q Community[1], if I'm in a good mood Reddit but I'm doing that less and hoping Tildes takes off. Then there's a bunch of stuff that I'm ploughing through at the moment, so lots of inquiries into patient safety or culture of NHS trusts and effective corporate boards. So, lots of stuff from NHS England, NHS Improvement, and on the gov.uk site. And then I'll have a look at Bailii to see if there are any recent useful cases about English benefits or family law.
I used to listen to a lot of radio, and I haven't for some time, and I'm going to start doing that a lot more.
It's in private alpha now, but if you're interested, just send me an email to the address in the blog post and I'll give you an invite (offer's open to anyone else as well).
HN, TechMeme, Google News, Drudge (like it or not, he helps set the agenda for the national conversation), NYT/WP, Real Clear Politics, MacRumors, scan Reddit for interesting topics, though hasn't been sticky for me as late, BBC News.
HN is probably the best at finding new and interesting stuff- though the main feed has been low volume lately- the 'new' feed is actually fertile ground if you scan through quickly.
1. Immediately relevant to my current interests
2. by people I who know write good papers.
For chaff-vs-wheat some of my friends use arxiv sanity?
to find popular articles I go to
-google scholar page of someone well known for a topic and look at their highly cited papers
-look at citations of highly cited papers
edit: just a warning-short term popularity of a scientific paper is almost surely not a good indicator of long term value.
I used to always visit techmeme but it became almost exclusively focused on google Apple amazon Microsoft Facebook Netflix. I’m going to go have a look right now to see if that’s still true.
Surprisingly no! Not for a few months, the content here (HN) just isn't what it used to be and i've easily replaced it with Skimfeed and selected Subreddits.
Nothing beats this blog. My Computer Science knowledge has improved by leaps & bounds because of this one website alone. University education has failed me, I sometimes wonder! Adrian Colyer is a machine, though lately he has toned it down. 3-4 review/ week.
[2] arXiv
Only the Hardware Architecture and Emerging Technologies part.
[1] → https://blog.acolyer.org/
[2] → https://arxiv.org/list/cs.AR/recent || https://arxiv.org/list/cs.ET/recent
PS → Not only brightens my morning, but brightens my day :)