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You might be surprised how much more you actually learn when you aren't holding the distraction machine in your hand.

Here is why moving your micro-learning to a big screen changed my retention—and my workflow. We often treat Blinkist as a "waiting room" tool—listening to Sapiens while waiting for coffee or reading Atomic Habits in the grocery line. blinkist desktop

If you find that your "learning time" keeps turning into "scrolling time," log out of the app on your phone. Open your laptop. Go to Blinkist.com. You might be surprised how much more you

I often split my screen. On the left: Blinkist explaining Never Split the Difference by Chris Voss. On the right: my email drafts or a project roadmap. If you find that your "learning time" keeps

We all know the feeling. You pull out your phone to "squeeze in 10 minutes of learning" on Blinkist. Three minutes later, you’ve checked Instagram, replied to a Slack message, and ordered a candle you don’t need.

On a desktop, that changes entirely. When I open Blinkist on my Mac or PC, I am sitting down. I am in work mode. The context switching stops. Instead of passive listening, I switch to active reading.

For years, Blinkist has been positioned as the ultimate mobile companion. But recently, I discovered the secret power-up for deep focus learning: