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I have come to a conclusion or realization that perhaps many developers I know including myself have a fanatical fascination with reading as many programming and technology blogs or listening to podcasts as humanly possible.

I sometimes wonder if this time would be much better spent in actual coding and doing, rather than the incessant thinking and perhaps wondering what the "other guy" is doing?

With a very large signal to noise ratio in most blogs and podcasts, is there real benefit in maintaining a huge and constant blog role.. or is this some primal fear or instinct to keep up the pace unless being left behind?

Can they simply be relegated to Google search and just-in-time learning?

Edit: (There are some amazing answers here and touch a philosophical nerve with me, if you are reading this for the first time, I recommend taking the time reading through the answers below)

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You mean very small signal-to-noise ratio, right? :-) – Peter Stone Jan 6 at 23:23
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Did you really mean 'large signal to noise ratio'? I think you might have intended 'large noise to signal ratio'? – duncan Jan 7 at 0:02
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If there was one criticism that I have of myself (I wish it was just one) I would say I fall in the reading not doing category.

However with this question there is no black or white answer. You have hit the nail on the head by saying there a very large signal to noise ratio in most blogs. My advice is to try and strike a balance, you should know when someone is talking a load of crap. Just hit read and fire up the IDE.

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I think there must be some primal fear at work... I don't read that much about coding, and I'm doing well enough without. But as you said, that's subjective.

I'd write code first, read code second, and resort to blogs third.

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This and coding horror is about all I read. I prefer to spend that extra time doing. It has worked out pretty well for me, I read just enough to keep up on the current trends/technologies.

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