Key-takeaways: The Blinkest App

in #writing6 years ago

I was watching the idiot box last night (like an idiot) and saw an advert I'd never seen before. I think it was fate because I usually mute the commercials when they come on. Anyway, it was a commercial advertising a new App called Blinkist. The App condenses non-fiction books to the "key takeaways" or "key ideas" allowing someone to gain just those key concepts in a shorter time period so that people can "fit reading into their life." Those are the claims on the commercial anyway.

The non-fiction books that have been decimated to the key-takeaways have been curated by industry experts and one can read (or listen) to titles specifically chosen for you. The short video claims that you'll have the world's knowledge in the palm of your hand.

Just to clarify for those that may not know what non-fiction means, (or have not yet read about it on the Blinkist App)...Non-fiction refers to writing based on the truth or accuracy of the events, people, or information presented within the book or text.

So, I have two thoughts on this Blinkist thing...

  1. Is reading so unfashionable these days that mankind needs to limit the amount they do? Also, is gaining true knowledge and understanding so unimportant and disinteresting that we need to have it packaged up neatly in a key-takeaway format to limit the time we waste gaining it?

  2. Do we need the information we gain to be specifically chosen for us by some App algorithm or hamsters on a spinning wheel or however they do it?

  3. What the actual f^^k.

OK, yes I know that's actually three points but it's my blog and I'm applying poetic license which means I can do whatever I want to.

Of course I'm not an idiot, (except for the TV watching thing as above), and so I understand how unpopular reading is these days. Reading rates right at the bottom of the list of importance to humans with things like:

  • Face-to-face socialising
  • Courtesy and manners
  • Respect
  • Generosity
  • Hard work

Reading, could never compete with selfies, Instagram, hubris, narcissism, computer games, drug taking, infidelity, Facebook, greed and the multitude of distractions and other qualities that seem to have taken over mankind and become valued essentials.

The beauty of it is that it's not free, Blinkist I mean, so people can buy it whilst also satisfying another of modern society's plague's...Consumerism. Sounds perfect! It's really a win-win-win situation isn't it? The developers make piles of money and consumers get to purchase! Nothing like that old-favourite neurotransmitter surge of Dopamine huh! And the third win? Well, that one is easy..It's the fact that users don't need to have a single independent thought. Ever. They can be spoon-fed their information via corporation-media-outlets, government and Blinkist. Oh man, how sweet is life now!

You can probably tell I'm not that impressed with this App. I don't know if it's a new thing or just a new spin on some other App but I don't understand mankind's insistence on cutting corners all the time. Seriously. Is this the precursor to not reading at all? Probably.

Think about it...Most people don't know how to write these days; The correct use of punctuation and spelling I mean. People stick their faces in their phones and call it social when in fact it's anti-social. And now one of the greatest sources of knowledge, reading, is being abbreviated, abridged, contracted, cut, pruned, trimmed, pared, condensed, summarised, and reduced..For what? So we have more time to fit reading into our lives. Pathetic.


Snapshot from the Blinkist interwebs page

Yes, yes I know there's probably plenty of advocates out there who can't wait to get onto Blinkist and start "reading" and I'm sure they will get a great deal of knowledge for their investment...Well, they'll only get the key takeaways to be honest although maybe for them that will be enough.

I won't pay for Blinkist, nor would I use it for free, or if they paid me to use it for that matter. Sure, I have limited time in life and reading takes up some of it but I still prefer to gain my understanding of things the old fashioned way; By reading it (all) and determining what information is important to me from what I have read. Skipping through a text or book to get only the key ideas as Blinkist does sounds like cheating but then that concept seems to align magnificently with most people's ethos so maybe it's totally legit..

Here's the link to Blinkist where a whole world of key-takeaways awaits the modern-day seeker of knowledge, wisdom and understanding.

P.s. I may be a part-owner of the App, but pay that no mind...Knowledge awaits you on Blinkest. Buy it now.

Note: sumber gambar buku

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I would also be careful considering the potential misinterpretation of the facts given the whole fake news movement. Could this be a publisher trying to influence these thoughts? No thanks for me either. Can’t understand this culture of “shortcuts!”

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How crazy is this? At first I wasn't so troubled (because I didn't pay attention to the commercial) but when I investigated I was! I will not be buying-in for sure. The world has gone short-cut mad.

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Do people not know they can get books "for free" from a library? Many libraries have subscriptions to digital libraries you can access on the go. The need for an app like this baffles me.

People are not very clever.

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I hear you man. It's mind boggling.

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I had to read that bit twice....respect, you say? Face-to-face socializing? You mean face-time, surely. Or perhaps video calls. As for the others, like "courtesy and manners" I'm not sure where I can download those, could you send me a link?

On a more serious note, that ad made my blood boil...."Fit reading into your life"? As if reading is some pesky, unpleasant task that needs to be dealt with... This sort of thing terrifies me and I would like to think it will crash and burn just like it deserves to. But I don't know...it sounds exactly like the sort of modern crap that would appeal to the Facebook/Instagram legions.
I mean seriously, I see so many people online posting cutesy quotes about reading and I keep thinking "but you don't read" because they don't. Now, imagine how happy they'd be with such an app - it would make them seem even more "knowledgeable" and they wouldn't have to waste any time with actual...puah....books.

Well, I don't know what's going on to be honest. I just can't explain some of this stuff. People seem to want to short cut everything in life to reach their destination faster rather than enjoy the journey of it. The thing is that the journey is life...The destination of life is death. Live the journey I reckon...But alas, most want to short cut it..I don't know why.

The answer may be on Blinkist but I'll never read it there.

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Relatively speaking, I read a lot, @galenkp, but in reality, I don't read nearly as much as I used to, and would like to. But, in good measure, reading is responsible for what I know, along with years of experiences, trial and error, etc.

It scares me sometimes how people go through this world without tapping into some knowledge on their own, rather than deriving it constantly from others. Guaranteed people would rather watch a four minute YouTube video of a book, movie or something else time consuming, and then base their ideas on that, rather than sitting down and consuming things themselves.

This Blinkist reminds me of something like cliff notes, or reader's digest, only from the sound of it, it's distilled even further.

To your point about abdicating one's ability to determine for oneself what the important takeaways are, I wouldn't want to trust that to anyone at this point in my life. I can't tell you how many times i've ended up making a decision that would have been far better had I gotten the information myself, rather than relying on someone else to sum things up for me. Even someone I could regularly trust.

Let alone someone I don't know, working with whatever agenda or motivation behind it. Even if there's not sinister involved, as you said, other people will filter and color information with their own perspectives.

That's going to happen just reading the information outright because of the author's own take and assumptions, which means more source material is required, not less.

So, anyway. I appreciate you putting this thought out there. More study and critical thinking required. Not less. :)

Nice response Glen. I agree with you completely and am stunned at the world's insistence on cutting things down for ease of use. There was actually a movie about this (fast-forwarding) through the boring parts of life. Called Click with Adam Sandler and Kate Beckinsale. I'd watch it again to see Kate anyday...But my point is that humanity are always seeking to cut to the chase fast-track everything and receive that instant gratification. That's what drives credit spending. Greed and hubris.

Information should be gained from the correct sources and then considered, weighed and measured by the consumer of that knowledge to determine suitability. But...Blinkist reckons an algorithm can do that for us...Yeah, I think not. Not for me anyways.

I think none of us read as much as we would like. I work and have many things to do so my reading time is limited however I will always read a body of work in its entirety. Blinkist can "OFF"

Note how I abbreviated fuck right off to save you reading time? I'm so thoughtful! 😂

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It seems like the perfect accompaniment to the whole Nanny state philosophy. Control everything with a never ending list of rules and propaganda and then spoon feed them only the information you want them have. It sounds a bit like the evening news followed by a current affair for the internet.

Yes, I agree. It's not just the fact that it promotes a reduced level of reading (and understanding) but endorses spoon-fed propaganda as you say. It's conditioning people to receive information and implanted thought without question...All packaged up to make it seem like a good thing, a benefit. Which I do not believe for a second that it is.

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Yeah, you wouldn't know if the information is filtered/censored or not. Without reading the companies' policies I have to wonder what would happen to any information that doesn't fit the ideals of the whoever ends up owning it.
It could become like Amazon Alexa and put a biased left wing twist on the information it regurgitates and change the meaning in the process.


I prefer to read the info myself like you.

Yeah, this is some pretty scary shit right here. There'll never be one in my house.

I like reading. I also like books. In a pinch or if you really don't like the book you can then repurpose it into a bludgeoning weapon.

Oh yes, the old bludgeon-someone-with- book ploy. I'm familiar with it. 🤔

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As the bludgeoner or the bludgeonee?

Well, let's go with a little of each. 😇

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That halo is telling XD

Too much you think? Not believable? 😈

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