If the problem is focusing on short-term writing which becomes worthless quickly, then simply hiding or showing dates shouldn’t much affect how long readers stay on the page: most short-term stuff shows its colors very quickly. (How many sentences does it take to figure out you’re not interested in a rant about John Kerry from 2004?)
I think McKenzie’s argument is that using a date can turn long content into short content, which many people do on accident, and while he doesn’t quantify it (which would be the value of A/B testing) I think he has enough evidence to establish the direction of the effect. Not using a date is obviously not sufficient to turn short content into long content, but I do think it may be helpful at getting one into the right state of mind, as it focuses the attention on sorting things by content rather than time. (Imagine trying to find all of Robin Hanson’s writing on construal level theory- yes, you can use the nearfar tag on Overcoming Bias, but that’s sorted by date, and there’s no solid introduction.)
(Imagine trying to find all of Robin Hanson’s writing on construal level theory- yes, you can use the nearfar tag on Overcoming Bias, but that’s sorted by date, and there’s no solid introduction.)
That’s a good example of how weak date markers are: if the dates were deleted completely from every OB post, people would still find them incomprehensible because there’s only one post which could be considered an overview of the concept, and is a needle in the haystack until and unless Hanson in some way synthesizes all his scattershot posts and allusions into a single Near-Far page.
The posts need some sort of organization imposed; the lack of that organization is what kills them, not some date markers. If my essays were broken up into 500-word chunks, and sorted either randomly or by date, they wouldn’t look much better.
If the problem is focusing on short-term writing which becomes worthless quickly, then simply hiding or showing dates shouldn’t much affect how long readers stay on the page: most short-term stuff shows its colors very quickly. (How many sentences does it take to figure out you’re not interested in a rant about John Kerry from 2004?)
I think McKenzie’s argument is that using a date can turn long content into short content, which many people do on accident, and while he doesn’t quantify it (which would be the value of A/B testing) I think he has enough evidence to establish the direction of the effect. Not using a date is obviously not sufficient to turn short content into long content, but I do think it may be helpful at getting one into the right state of mind, as it focuses the attention on sorting things by content rather than time. (Imagine trying to find all of Robin Hanson’s writing on construal level theory- yes, you can use the nearfar tag on Overcoming Bias, but that’s sorted by date, and there’s no solid introduction.)
That’s a good example of how weak date markers are: if the dates were deleted completely from every OB post, people would still find them incomprehensible because there’s only one post which could be considered an overview of the concept, and is a needle in the haystack until and unless Hanson in some way synthesizes all his scattershot posts and allusions into a single Near-Far page.
The posts need some sort of organization imposed; the lack of that organization is what kills them, not some date markers. If my essays were broken up into 500-word chunks, and sorted either randomly or by date, they wouldn’t look much better.