Rao Reading Algorithm (2024)

(raohacker.com)

25 points | by surprisetalk 5 days ago ago

9 comments

  • alexpotato 2 days ago

    An "algorithm" that I used to great effect in business school was the following:

    - Most well written books start each paragraph with a thesis statement

    - The next couple sentences are usually in support of that thesis statement

    - The final sentence of the paragraph is usually the thesis statement again

    - Ergo, if you are in a hurry, just read the first sentence of each paragraph.

    A friend had to read a book in only 3 hours and was lamenting that she didn't have time to read and I suggested the above.

    She came back the next day and said:

    "Everyone had only read the first 1/3 of the book but I had 'read' the whole thing and looked like a genius!"

    PS I also made it through 3 out of the 4 semesters of business school without buying any of the books/pamphlets etc but that is a story for another time.

  • jackallis 2 days ago

    dont people just read for fun; grab a book and streach out in the lawn, deck or beach and just read? why does it have to optimized, algorithmized, systamized?

  • mbeavitt 2 days ago

    You can't tease me with "Algorithm" in the title and then not actually define an algorithm... TL;DR: Read lots of widely acclaimed books that are close to the source of what you want to learn?

    • sunrunner 2 days ago

      It's a reading equivalent to the Feynman Problem Solving Algorithm (which I personally think is really just a variant of the universal Nike Algorithm applied specifically to problem solving).

      • mbeavitt 2 days ago

        Is it though? The algorithm you reference is meant to be a joke:

        1) Write down the problem.

        2) Think real hard.

        3) Write down the solution.

        This is not a useful algorithm in any sense, apart from that it might be thought provoking.

        What's the "universal nike algorithm"? I didn't find anything on google.

        • _Algernon_ 2 days ago

          I assume it's a play on Nike's tag-line: "Just do it"

          • mbeavitt 2 days ago

            Oh, I get it. Missed the joke.

  • KnuthIsGod 2 days ago

    AI slop...

  • _Algernon_ 2 days ago

    [dead]