Screen tools against your values
Admit a technology only if it strongly supports something you deeply value — and is the best way to do so.
Why it works
Most apps clear a "some benefit" bar, which is why "is this useful?" keeps everything. Raising the bar to "does this strongly serve a core value, and is it the best tool for it?" flips the default from opt-out to opt-in, so attention flows to what matters by design rather than by accident.
How to do it
- Name 2-3 things you deeply value (relationships, craft, health, learning).
- For each candidate technology, ask: does it strongly serve one of these?
- If yes, ask: is it the best way to serve that value, or just a convenient one?
- Keep only tools that pass both screens; for the rest, decide a narrow, specific role or drop them.
Evidence
This is an applied decision rule, not an empirical finding. It draws on the well-supported idea that environment design beats willpower, and on minimalism’s broader logic of subtraction. (mechanistic)
No study tests "the minimalist screen" directly; it is a values-clarification step applied to technology.
Common mistake
Using "is it useful?" as the test. Almost everything is somewhat useful, so that question keeps everything — the bar has to be "strongly serves a value AND is the best option".
Practice this with IX Coach
IX Coach guides a short values-clarification first, then helps you run each app through that filter so the keep/cut decision is grounded in what you actually care about.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).