I like to take the same approach I learned from Agile, "wide not deep". I think it is important to have at least some exposure to the new trends. F#, Ruby, IronRuby, IronPython etc. Am I going to use any of those in my current or next project, probably not. But I've already learned what I consider to be valuable insight that I am using in my current project by just very basic exposure. Chances are you will find something occasionally, if you're looking, that will provide some immediate value and that's when you go deep enough to get the details. That's why I think it's important to be looking.
I understand your point about prototyping and actually trying the new stuff in order to get a feel but I disagree that you have to go to this level with most things before you know if there is value there for you. I think once you start looking, you start to get a feel for "what's out there". You start telling yourself, "oh, this is how project ABC is solving the same XYZ problem I read about project DEF having" - and you already understand the basics.
