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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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as i am still a stundent i read a lot during breaks. also i tend to start reading when i find that a particular lecture is boring or i find that i have heard about this before.

at home i do not have a tv and i sometimes have to force myself to turn off the computer to read, but most of the time i manage to find half an hour to an hour to read.

also you could try reading on the way to work or university if you do not drive yourself.

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Like most IT people I don't manage very well at all due to way too much work to do... I've got several books sitting around still unopened. I don't get enough sleep as it is, going from job to job to job, etc. Haven't turned on a TV in weeks, nevermind having half an hour to sit down with a book.

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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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I buy one or two new books every month and put them in the toilet, the one place I will not be bugged or interrupted... because everybody knows what happens if I drop a SBD.

Aside from that, I tend to read before going to sleep.

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Before managing time to read technical books it's important to manage time to read books of any kind. If you have some kind of reading habit you can easily fit all kinds of books: technical, novels, etc.

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I gravitate toward the shorter, well written books. The ones that don't tackle every dreadful crevice of a subject. If they are well written I stay interested - along the lines of Douglas Crockford's JavaScript: The Good Parts - weighing in at a mere 145 pages. If you're interested, you will be re-reading sections to flesh out the nuances.

If I get through the shorties (I did with Crockford), and my interest has been piqued, I move on to the tomes, like JavaScript The Definitive Guide by David Flanagan - weighing in at 945 pages.

Also, it helps to frequently skim and go back. Sort of an iterative and incremental reading style.

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The way I do it is I often alternate between pleasure reading (Science fiction, fantasy, mystery) and technical books. I force myself to read a good technical book for every two non-technical books I read.

Also with respect to reading books. In the last year I've found that reading blogs can be more effective than books for certain subjects. New technology in particular has much better blog posts than available books. F# is a great example of this. There are only 2-3 books for F# and none of them are really great. The blog world though is full of impactful information.

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The book "How to Read a Book" is excellent. One point they make, and I agree with completely, is that reading in bed is doing yourself and the book a disservice. Unless you are using it as a tranquilizer, but if you want to really learn, it is important to do so in an environment conducive to learning. These usually don't include pillows and a comforter.

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Do they still make books? I just get all my info in the intertubes.

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Learn how to speed read or at least skim books. Most things you learn from doing especially with technology and math. I carry textbooks in my man bag and pull them out whenever I'm on the tube or bus.

I use an index card to keep my eyes on one line, it lets me read a lot faster. You might not get everything but you'll get an overview of the topic and can read it thru again.

ie: I read thru a book on Risk Management in Financial Institutions recently. I went thru 400 pages in 6 weeks of reading during my commute.

Remember theres a lot of idle time in the day, don't confuse that with relaxation. Sitting in your can or sitting on a bus listening to music is not relaxation time. You can turn that into productive time quite easily.

I'm looking into picking up an IRex Iliad for reading PDFs, I currently have a sony PRS-505 ebook for reading novels but its aweful for PDFs.

PS: I work 10-14h 6 days a week

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When I read novels, I read quite slowly - effectively narrating them to myself. Now, it doesn't matter that I consume novels at a snail's pace: I'm reading for leisure. However, I hardly need to point out that narration is a terrible way to read technical books.

I don't make a lot of time to read technical books, so I have to make that time count. Apart from practising my speed-reading, which helps with all but the most complicated paragraphs, I find that my best ally is to decide which bits not to read. I don't have a bottomless pit of a memory - quite the opposite. So I like to get a brief overview of my subject, and enough detail to get me started, plus any obviously necessary bits of knowledge that will make me sound less vacuous.

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To be honest, I have never actually read a technical book cover to cover if it was over a programming topic. More often than not I just read the chapters that contain information that apply to what I am currently doing, or that seem interesting.

When I do sit down and read a chapter or two in a technical book it tends to depend upon what I am working on and where I am at. If I am working on a problem at work and the book has the solution - then I will just read the chapter and solve the problem. Otherwise, I typically read the books during lunch if I'm not eating with others, during my commute, or when I have some free time on the weekends.

Time management in regards to technical books is entirely dependent upon what you are looking to get out of them. If you find it hard to read them cover to cover, you might want to just focus on the chapters that seems the most intersting to you.

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I am lucky in that I get paid to do it. The company I work for not only allows me to have up to 3 hours of personal development (researching new technologies, reading tech books etc.) a day, but if I find a new resource I would like, they will have it shipped amazon prime and on my desk ASAP. I take this time very seriously, and try to distill as much info as I can, so that I can distribute it to my co-workers. Not everyone likes to do all the tech reading, so I take that burden.

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If you can't get your work done in an 8 hour day, you're taking on too much. Fix that first.

Then you've freed up 2-4 hours a day that you could use for reading.

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Complete all your tasks ahead of schedule. Spare some time with books. Or on weekends you read.

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I get asked this question a lot :) (along with: "how do you get the time to read all those blogs!"). Basically I usually come back home earlier than my wife so I just have some free time to read a few pages each day. I also read a little at work, but not that much, and mostly it's a "find quick answer" kind of reading.

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Further to itsmatt, here's now i approach technical reading:

  1. Reiterate, schedule it! Like any project at home, making time for it is the only way to get it done.
  2. My office at home has a closable-lockable door. If you're PC is in the bedroom and you are able to move it out into a separate room, do it, you'll thank yourself
  3. My office only has my desk, PC, bookshelf, a reading chair, and headphones. I don't have a big stereo, nothing on the walls, no clock, no clutter, no other distractions
  4. My reading chair is a guest chair, not a lazy boy.
  5. My office has natural light, and has a reading light
  6. I choose something i'm really interested in, it's not always about programming, sometimes it's Scientific America, Wired or even PC Magazine

I was really hard to get my office to look this way, but after i did that, it was easier.

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I put some reading material on my Smartphone. That way, I can always read a little passage when a time window opens.

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First, figure out how you already spend your time. Keep a log of activities during your entire day. After a week or two, break out the Excel pie chart. See where your time goes. Then decide what gets cut to make room for reading.

BTW, don't bother reading when you're tired. It won't stick. Look up SQ3R on wikipedia so you can be more effective at reading and remembering.

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In the bath, safe from from interuptions (but be careful you don't drop the book).

I try to avoid reading or working anything too close to bedtime, if my mind is buzzing I have real trouble getting to sleep and when I do I dream of code and wake up knackered.

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I like to take a break from the screen periodically at work - maybe 15 minutes twice a day - to do some reading. I have a comfy chair in my office - usually make some tea - and relax and read.

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I read books only during unemployment, relevant to the last interview questions that I could not answer, or relevant to the future questions, if I know what they are going to be. Cannot find time otherwise.

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