One Sec als Browser Plug In: https://one-sec.app/browser-extension/
Sehr empfehlenswert!
#OneSec #againstdoomscrolling #doomscrolling #MentalWellbeing
One Sec als Browser Plug In: https://one-sec.app/browser-extension/
Sehr empfehlenswert!
#OneSec #againstdoomscrolling #doomscrolling #MentalWellbeing
10 Euro im Jahr (ermäßigt weil ich berechtigte Apps habe) damit die App mir erklärt wie man einen Siri Shortcut einrichtet ich bin so ein Opfer #OneSec
Benutzt jemand #OneSec oder eine andere App die andere Apps limitiert? Möchte was das mich beim Öffnen der Mitarbeiter App in meiner Freizeit daran erinnert, diese scheiß App bitte sofort wieder zuzumachen
#zukunftswerkstatt ➡️ "Ständig online! Exzessive Mediennutzung bei Kindern und Jugendlichen" ❗ Ab wann wird Mediennutzung problematisch? Wie können junge Menschen vor exzessiver Nutzung und Kontrollverlust geschützt werden?
Diese und andere Fragen diskutierten die Teilnehmenden am 06.12.2024 auf der digitalen Veranstaltung der ZUKUNFTSWERKSTATT der BzKJ.
#Jugendmedienschutz #Kinderrechte #digitaleTeilhabe #FediEltern #Bildung #exzessiveMediennutzung #onesec #BAJ
In Praise of Friction and Compromise
Compromise: Kindle
The room is pitch black. The clock reads 6:15am. The sun won’t be up for another two hours and I’m lying in bed under a thick quilt, lightly touching the edge of my Kindle to flip to the next page of the novel I’m reading (Emily St. John Mandel’s Station 11, if you are curious). I’m rediscovering the pleasure of reading, of being fully immersed for an hour or more in a fictional tale, while my toddler is asleep in the next room.
I used to be an avid reader but the first year of parenthood – especially the light / broken sleep – meant I had no mental capacity or energy to read a book. Then my daughter turned 11 months old, started sleeping a solid 12-hour stretch in her own room every night, and I began picking up books again. 2022 was all about non-fiction, but for the first book of 2023 I wanted to dive back into fictional worlds again. Thus Station 11.
I think of my new reading habits as a compromise – and in a way a metaphor of how I am approaching my relationship to technology. Harnessing the power of technological progress, using modern tools, but not being used by them.
By being fully immersed in a book for an hour or more, I am retraining my brain to pay attention, to really focus. I do not feel compelled to grab my phone to check social media or fire up a website. It feels like a small act of rebellion, of reclaiming my humanity in a world – an online world – that reaps enormous profits from people’s scattered attention.
Since 2012, I have been doing most of my reading on a Kindle.
Yes, Amazon’s Kindle.
I love the ability to carry with me – in a tiny purse – all my favorite books. As I mentioned, 99% of books I read are non-fiction and as soon as I’m done with a book, I immediately export the passages I highlighted, I format them nicely and print them out… so I can have a physical copy of a book’s most memorable concepts.
Now that I’m a parent – days are busier and leisure time scarce – I try to seize any opportunity to pick up reading. If the Kindle is in the living room and I’m afraid the creaky wooden floors may wake up my daughter, well… I resume reading the book on the Kindle app of my iPhone. Something I would have never imagined doing.
I used to be an absolutist but the older I get, the more I appreciate nuance and compromise.
If you are wondering, I suppose the downside of buying and reading books on a Kindle is that technically you do not own them, but are simply “leasing” them from Amazon.
And if the company so chooses, they could deactivate your account, making you lose access to all your e-books… or simply pull a book from your device, unbeknownst to you, like they did – ironically – with an edition of Orwell’s 1984.
Amazon also knows what you are reading and your pace… if that is the sort of thing that bothers you.
I own two Kindle devices – the oldest one is offline, which gives me some peace of mind regarding the contents it is holding. And for recent e-books on my newer Kindle, like I mentioned, I typically create a physical copy of the passages that meant the most to me, so I feel at peace with physical “backups” should the unimaginable happen.
Friction: one sec
A while back, I have written about how I “resist time thieves” through friction:
Unpopular opinion: I love friction. While tech platforms, app developers and countless companies are attempting to create a friction-less world, adding voice commands and face recognition to everyday objects to allow us to do things faster, and more effortlessly, I say: not for me. I don’t mind the extra steps. Why? My power of concentration and privacy depend on it.
I continued:
Setting aside the argument that “smart objects” are a Trojan horse for the surveillance capitalism industrial complex, I find friction to be essential in order to maintain focus and concentration.
My main advice back then was to delete all social media and distracting apps from one’s phone.
Three years later, in this post-pandemic brave new world, I understand the importance of compromise and nuance. And since writing that post, a new app came out that perfectly helps in this respect, creating friction for the apps that you wish to use less.
An app to curb app use. Again, something I had never imagined would be a thing, but here we are.
The app is called one sec. It was created by 27-year-old German developer Frederik Riedel. The free version allows you to focus on one app, while the premium version is unlimited.
Here is its elevator pitch:
one sec forces you to take a deep breath whenever you open social media apps. It’s as simple as effective: added friction makes distracting apps less appealing.
Once you have identified an app you’d like to use less or more mindfully (it can be any app, not just social media ones), you follow the instructions clearly explained by one sec and create an automation in Apple’s Shortcuts app.
The next time you attempt to open the app you wish to use less (let’s say it’s Mastodon), here is what happens:
I have been using this automation for Mastodon and I’m seeing dramatic changes already. Any time I unlock my phone and I am about to click on Mastodon, I have this sense of guilt mixed with annoyance because I know the screen prompt from one sec will come up… and it will tell me how many times I have attempted to open the app in the last 24 hours. So I think about it twice before doing it. My usage has definitely gone down.
one sec is a really sophisticated app, with many more additional features – I only scratched the surface with my description. one sec also features:
I have only been using one sec for a few days but I already find it indispensable. Try it out for yourselves and let me know how you found it.
Onwards and upwards,
Elena
➡️ #BzKJ-Förderprojekte 2024 ➡️ Bildschirmzeit reduzieren: Potenzial zur „Konsumtransformation“ der Smartphone-App „one sec“ weiterentwickeln
➡️ Im Rahmen des Förderprogramms stellt die BzKJ insgesamt rund 225.000 Euro für die Förderung von sieben Projekten zur Verfügung.
🔗 Zur Übersicht der 2024 geförderten BzKJ-Projekte geht es hier: https://www.bzkj.de/bzkj/service/alle-meldungen/kindgerechte-digitale-angebote-entwickeln-bzkj-bewilligt-foerderantraege-fuer-sieben-projekte-242356
#onesec #digitaleTeilhabe #Jugendmedienschutz #FediEltern #Bildung
实话说 #onesec 最近对我不太管用了,我磨练出来了,能在通过第一次打断后一口气刷好久抖音…然后昨天为了史努比表盘而更新了手机系统,才发现onesec每次问我需要几分钟之后,等约定时间到了它还会再跳出来打断我第二次!(实在是太烦了所以)真的超级有效诶
In einer Woche hat One Sec mir mehr als 50 Minuten Lebenszeit vor Social Media beschützt
Vor 7 Tagen habe ich One Sec auf meinem iPhone installiert und seitdem hält mich die App sehr erfolgreich davon ab, nur mal eben Insta oder Facebook zu checken und ZACK sind 45 Minuten rum und ich we
https://blog.lxkhl.com/in-einer-woche-hat-one-sec-mir-mehr-als-50-minuten-lebenszeit-vor-social-media-beschuetzt
#ADHS #App #Focus #Neurodiversity #Neuroproductivity #OneSec #Prokrastinierne #Zeitsparen
I would normally agree on this, and I did use the web version of Instagram on my iPad, whenever I decided that was a thing I wanted to do.
But some of these services lock features behind the mobile app, like changing your website on the profile. 🤨
I’ve found that having the app combined with setting up #OneSec for it works pretty well, since I still get that friction.
Hey @frederik & @leomehlig, congrats on the big launch and the collab.
Honestly, I have tried to use #Structured and #OneSec regularly, but never found the discipline or structure to keep going.
Now, I am eager to try once again. 💪🏻🔥
One question or wish: can I somehow select which (iCloud-enabled?) calendar to use for the integration? The entry was created in our shared family calendar and all devices go off every time the entry is changed.
App-Kooperation: one sec sorgt dafür, dass Structured-Aufgaben erledigt werden
Die iOS-Anwendungen Structured und one sec dürfen regelmäßigen Lesern geläufig sein. Beide stammen aus deutscher Entwicklung, und während es sich bei Structured um einen Tagesplaner handelt, der eine To-Do-Liste und einen Terminkalender integriert, will one sec dafür sorgen, dass man seinen Fokus nicht verliert und Social-Media-Portale und sonstige Dienste mit hohem Ablenkungspotenzial bewusst und in […]