jack: (Default)
[personal profile] jack
There are a lot of webcomics and blogs I read intermittently that have some sort of ongoing story, so the reading pattern I really want to follow is:

1. Feel a bit bored.
2. Go to the last update on this comic/blog I read.
3. Read from there forward until I get bored of it or get up to the present.
4. Go do something productive.
5. Repeat.

However, what I end up doing is:

1. Go to read something I've not read for a while
2. See spoilers on what's going to happen in today's update
3. Spend five minutes faffing looking for the last update I read
4. Read forward from there.
5. Say "sod it", I should give up entirely xor read it every day.

Now maybe "sod it" is the right answer, but can anyone think of a better approach?

* Ideally there'd be a browser plugin which lets me bookmark a date, but when I click "next" automatically updates the bookmark. (Although that may fail with comics where the latest update redirects to the home page.)

* Or maybe, just have a "stuff I'm reading" browser window, and leave it open all the time. Except (a) it's annoying if it's ever accidentally closed and (b) it would have 50+ tabs and (c) is there an easy way to share that between computers

* Alternatively, I could subscribe to RSS updates, and then read from the "last unread" or "last nondeleted" forward? But not everything has a good RSS feed.

I feel like I'm probably missing an obvious way of reading intermittent updates that everyone does by default. (Other than "not bother", I'd find it easier to go cold turkey if I have the option of reading stuff if I like, rather than having to cut out everything at once.)

Date: 2012-10-15 11:51 am (UTC)
ptc24: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ptc24
Reading does indeed feed upon a near-daily basis. If you do something regularly and frequently, it becomes habitual, whereas if there isn't a set schedule, or that schedule is sparse, then you just lose interest.

(Sorry...)