Idler Magazine

30 pointsposted 4 days ago
by tomjakubowski

7 Comments

mellosouls

14 hours ago

From Wikipedia, a quote that seems relevant to this forum with its anti-grind-culture ethic:

On the practice of idling, [founder] Tom Hodgkinson writes:

A characteristic of the idler's work is that it looks suspiciously like play. This, again, makes the non-idler feel uncomfortable. Victims of the Protestant work ethic would like all work to be unpleasant. They feel that work is a curse, that we must suffer on this earth to earn our place in the next. The idler, on the other hand, sees no reason not to use his brain to organise a life for himself where his play is his work, and so attempt to create his own little paradise in the here and now.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Idler_(1993)

sph

13 hours ago

> a quote that seems relevant to this forum with its anti-grind-culture ethic

Are we reading the same forum?

I have noticed that my anti-work (or anti-AI, or left-leaning) comments tend to do better when EU and East Coast are awake, and get downvoted when West Coast is most active.

mellosouls

11 hours ago

I meant the quote is anti-grind-culture rather than HN, though I wouldn't ascribe a solid view to the latter, just the startup culture it is based in can often be very grind-nonsense.

graemep

12 hours ago

I used to be a subscriber. It is good but I have more than enough to read without it.

Also one of the few places that has published a letter from me :)

For tech people its had some interesting articles promoting retro-computing and FOSS as more "idle" alternatives.

onion2k

16 hours ago

My partner has been a subscriber for years. It's great. Stewart Lee's music reviews have been a highlight, but there's great long form content in most editions.

dickiedyce

17 hours ago

Cracking magazine, and the frequent Idler online interviews generally thought provoking. Excellent cast of occasional contributors too.