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I have always wondered how people make time to read technical books. Because after working for 8-10 hrs a day (sometimes even 12 hrs) first thing I want to do is to keep myself away from the technical details. Even if I try to read the technical books, I can't put my 100% in to it (with out that reading is of no use, I believe). I read a bit during weekends but most of the time I will be on some other personal work.

So, Let me know how do you people manage time for reading technical books?

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Turn off the television.

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I would also suggest turning off your Laptop/PC, unless you are reading from it. – Vivek Oct 16 '08 at 12:18
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You have a TV? Wow, how odd! :) – Jonathan Leffler Oct 16 '08 at 12:58
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I schedule it. (Seriously)

The way I look at it, most of my technical reading is directly related to the work I do and so it is a necessary and vital part to getting the job done. I block off 30 minutes a day to do some technical reading at my desk, whether that is out of a book or off some website. I don't tend to read a lot of technical books at home because I simply have other priorities.

I put my headphones in to block out any office chit-chat and can read quite a few pages during that half hour.

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I think it works best while commuting :)

Otherwise its way tough in this busy world today!!

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I listen to tech podcasts when I'm driving or walking. Not quite the same, but I still learn

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On the throne! (elsewhere my girlfriend think she can ask me any question at any without problem, but you need to focus!)

Also dimecasts these are short 10 minutes videos to the point and on very nice topic.

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Easily the best place to get anything done, although my girlfriend complains that I spend too long on the toilet. – Mike B Oct 16 '08 at 17:00
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I try and read a little bit every day and take the odd 15 mins at work to do this. Its important to keep learning.

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Eat lunch? Read while eating. Carve out some learning time during work. You may need to convince your boss this is important, but most reasonable employers understand that technical folks need to keep improving their skills. If you are seriously working 10 and sometimes 12 hour days regularly, find a different job -- or let your employer know that he's hurting productivity. I've seen several studies that shows that productivity actually improves with reductions in work time. Here's a link to one article.

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All it takes is one hour a night. Turn off the TV (don't worry, Tivo's got you covered, right?). Schedule a defrag/virus-scan or some other task that renders your computers useless. Grab the book, go to a quiet, comfortable place with good lighting and just read.

It also helps if the book you are reading is well written and is conducive to just reading rather than "read paragraph - do example" type books.

Update:

Apparently I have more catching up to do than others here. I like to have at least an hour block. I can get through a solid 20-30 pages of material in that time. Adjust the amount of time you set aside appropriately for your reading habits.

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I try to read and understand a chapter in bed, just before sleep. It's quite often that I read, but I don't understand it. In this case I read it again the next day.

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Reading before bed is good, but reading in bed lets your mind associate being in bed with a wakeful, attentive state. As one who is prone to insomnia, I find it best to read in a comfy chair near bed. – Alan Hensel Oct 16 '08 at 13:22
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I got half an hour on the train to and from work. It's hard to use that time for coding on anything serious, but it works allright for reading half a chapter or so in a book.

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The first thing to do is to find time to read "Getting Things Done" or go visit 43folders.com.

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Instead of working my whole life and then retiring at the end, I take my retirement in chunks by quitting and being unemployed periodically. This approach gives me lots of time to read (also lots of time to watch television, surf the web, stare at the wall etc.).

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I use safari.oreilly.com for reading books online.

I read the books while commuting. A sub-notebook PC or a smartphone helps a lot :)

Also, limit your stackoverflow use :)

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I try to go to the coffee shop a few times a week and spend an hour or so reading a technical book while I have my coffee before work -- it has been the most effective and pleasant way for me to read tech books.

Reading them in bed at bedtime is a recipie for falling asleep after two pages, I'm fresher in the morning and I can listen to music and really focus.

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As RSI patient I have to do some kind of fitness training, so I tend to read while on the hometrainer.

That way the training part doesnt seem as boring, and I get some reading done. Though its hard to concentrate with hartrates above 125, so just keep it low for some time, then put the reading material away, put on your mp3 player and step on it :)

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I have a habit of reading early in the morning from my schooling days...I found it to be most distraction free :)

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Weekends mostly.. and finding the right books that keep me reading. Over time I find myself reading meta-books and soft-human-thinking skills... The value gained lasts longer than the techies.
technical books are normally tough long reads and require simultaneously typing.. So I am very choosy about the techie books i read.
Aim for something like a book every 2 months or so.. Other than that the only advice is 'If you want it hard enough... you'll make time for it.'

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My secret: pack a lunch. Since I don't have to go anywhere to get lunch, my 1-hour break is a lot more time than I need to eat. (Bonus: it's cheap.)

In the past year, I've learned several whole new skill sets from what I read on my lunch break. And since I'm on my own time, I don't feel guilty if it doesn't have immediate relevance to my job.

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I find the best way to study new material is to do it in short bursts but often. Easy-to-read material will be understood after the first pass however more often than not, reading technical material can be very heavy so chipping away at it, bit-by-bit, is the approach I like the best.

In the past, I used to spend a few minutes reading material before I fell asleep. It's surprising how effective this can be!. On the other hand, an old friend used to keep tech books in his toilet, but I don't have the 'concentration' for that kind of reading. A few years ago, when I started a new job in a new field (it was quite a leap), I used to turn up early and spend an hour every morning reading through books and spec, studying the code, before the rest of the staff turned up and settled into their coffees.

These days I take the attitude that learning on the job is 1) necessary to keep uptodate, and 2) motivational - plus I'm appraised annually on my 'learnability', so I try hard to fit in time for short bursts (10-30 minutes) of study between daily tasks.

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We are always multi-tasking, waiting for any of the blocking operations to complete (like long compiling, waiting for your buddy to do something for you, internet failure.) That is when you read a page.

Always bring along a book. You can read a page while waiting for a car wash to be completed, waiting in line for an appointment with a doctor, or a table.

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Sign your kids up for sports but don't get involved. You get to sit under a shady tree for 90 minutes during baseball practice and all you need to do is yell "Atta boy!" every five minutes or so.

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I start my day out by NOT OPENING UP EMAIL, and instead take 20-30 minutes to read technical material - mostly reviewing rss feeds, but occasionally real books. It actually takes quite a bit of discipline not to jump into email first thing, but it's totally worth it. If your boss or work schedule doesn't allow that kind of activity during 'office hours', get to work 30 minutes early (or maybe get a new boss :) ). Reading at the end of the day doesn't work for me that well because my brain is too tired to engage and that makes it harder to be disciplined about it. Doing it first thing in the morning not only takes care of the scheduling issue, but it allows me to focus on the topics more clearly.

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On the way to work (train)

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I normally read on the bed before I go to sleep. I often fall asleep with the book in my hand ("ouch!")

You could also wake up early and read.

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I usually go to the office by the tram. Yes, it's slow, but it does'n get into traffic jams and it runs steady enough to read. So I have at least twenty minutes everyday for reading. It's not much, but it has regularity I can't keep to otherwise.

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Our company has enacted a period of 3 hours a week 'playtime' to do whatever (tech related, not playing warcraft) when you cannot be interrupted by work (short of emergency situations) I find it a good opportunity to catch up on the stack of magazines collecting on my desk or to go thru a chapter or two of some training guide.

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Make it part of your schedule. Staying current is actually part of your job

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I would suggest one solid hour in the early morning (6 to 7 AM) for good reading. Lunch breaks never work for me because of peer pressure. Late nights are also fine but of course that depends on personal commitments. Being a bachelor myself, I have plenty of time to kill, usually in the late nights. And I usually end up doing the bulk of my technical reading at around 11 PM to 1 AM.

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Ruthless efficiency ;-)

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take breaks during working hours and do some readings; practice during weekends.

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