š” Arhythmia

You may have noticed Iāve lacked consistency here for a while.
Iād been hoping to go twice a week, but itās been tough to build the rhythm around that alongside other responsibilities. So for now weāll return to a weekly routine to make things run more reliably on a Friday morning (ha, not this week) for the foreseeable future.
After shifting a few contract roles recently and making more room to advance my new efforts with the Byteside website, the whole idea of rhythms has been playing on my mind.
We have so many competing ideas in our lives that scheduling blocks and windows of time often feels like the best solution to ensuring we make time for whatās important and whatās critical. But such blocks also struggle to accommodate or flex to respond to the reality of the world. Things change. Weird things happen. And if youāve tried to run a tight schedule then the wheels can come off very quickly.
But the rhythm itself is important. Finding ways to not let the wrong things take priority is essential to feeling like youāre on the right path. So how do we balance these competing needs to flex where needed while putting the guard rails around what deserves our time and attention?
When weāre looking at the wide view of a week or a month it feels sensible that we can make our attention go where we need it to. But in the heat of the moment, things fall apart so quickly. Calls, emails, life. Everything conspires against us.
Right now Iām going back to basics. I love using Todoist as my āone trusted sourceā for tracking everything I have to get done. But at the end of my day Iām also writing down a paper list of the most important tasks for the next day.
Seeing those tasks in ink on paper ā not too many, 3-5 usually ā helps bring that focus back every time I feel it slipping.
Itās working OK so far. And while the larger rhythms of my weekly routine are still shifting as a variety of contract jobs need my attention, Iām finding that list helps to ensure that the ongoing development of Byteside rarely slips down the list.
Weāll soon have a team of seven writers working on the site. Itās exciting times. Thanks for following along.
@ Byteside
Lots of new stories each week now! So many Iāll just start highlighting in future editions, but hit the site for everything!
All the AGDA nominees are right here
Hands on with Xbox game streaming on Android
Amazon sold way more Xbox One X than it should last week
New open game builder Core gets big backing from Epic Games
We size compared the Xbox Series X with other consoles, objects and vegetables
Performing arts high school trash TV is the perfect medicine
HeroQuest gets a faithful crowdfunded remake
BlizzCon becomes BlizzConline in February 2021
Ode to a Samsung Galaxy Note 20 Ultra
YouTube crowdsourced captions feature to be shut down
LA Comic Con is going ahead and dear God why is this happening?
Legacy Esports go where no OCE team has gone before at Worlds 2020 (and the dream run ends here)
Asking people to read the bloody article before retweeting is working, says Twitter
Cyberpunk 2077 developers push team into mandatory crunch
Podcasts
Your amazing dystopian flying family drone
Byteside: New NBN, TIO complaints, Ringās household flying drone, Shazam for plants, Nvidia dramas, esports and Diablo. A lot in this episode!
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Legacy gets set for its League of Legends 2020 Worlds campaign
High Resolution: All the deets on when and where to watch Legacy rep Australia and the OPL as League of Legends World Championships kick off this weekend.
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Byteside: We delve into pre-order shenanigans, Xbox buying Bethesda, the NBN fibre renaissance, and the re-release of HeroQuest.
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News
When coffee makers are demanding a ransom, you know IoT is screwed
Watch along as hacked machine grinds, beeps, and spews water. This is just nuts.
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MIT Researchers Say Their Fusion Reactor Is āVery Likely to Workā
A team of researchers at MIT claim their āSPARCā compact fusion reactor should work ā or at least in theory, as they argue in a series of papers. If we get fusion reactors out of 2020 would it be a net win?
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The whole āflight to nowhereā thing is quite a mess for the environment, but this is a positive alternative if youāre hankering to get on a plane again without the massive carbon impact.
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Interesting
Art of Rally is a beautiful racer like no other
Art of Rally feels both authentic and ethereal due to its brilliant audiovisual design. Racing veteran or a newbie ā this is all style, all substance.
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Studio Ghibli releases a gorgeous free image archive
Take the edge off anytime you need to with some gorgeous images from a new free access archive of Studio Ghibli stills.
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Great digital paths to learn new skills for free
Itās fine to not feel highly motivated to learn new things. But if you are feeling it, hereās some free ways to skill up for fun or profit.
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By Byteside
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