I prefer to call it “euthanizing” time
It’s becoming a problem for you; admit it. You’re checking jonssons.org thirty or forty times per hour just to see if we’ve served up anything new to slake your thirst for incisive commentary, poignant verse, rapier wit.
Give your mousing finger a rest and use a news aggregator.
Think of an aggregator as a piece of software that makes web browsing look and feel like receiving e-mail. Except you won’t be told how LO INTRETS RATE$$ are getting. You let your aggregator run in the background, and it tells you when new articles have arrived. Then you can click through them quickly in a single window, skipping over uninteresting subject lines or writers (such as myself).
You can’t keep up with the whole web this way. Yet. But an increasing number of sites (not just weblogs like this one) are using syndication technology to allow aggregators to get at their content.
I like SharpReader for at least three reasons:
- It works (a lot of aggregators out there are still pretty rough)
- I like the way it works (no frills, but all the essentials)
- It’s built with tools I work with (the C# programming language and Microsoft’s .NET Framework)
Radio UserLand is a less fly-by-night (read “more commercial”) operation, if that matters to you. 
Chris Sells has written a layman’s explanation of RSS feeds, the technology that enables aggregators to do what they do. It’s definitely worth a read, especially for the ideas it provides on ways to keep up with information you might not have thought it possible to aggregate.