Aaron Parecki
You might want to give this a read! https://boffosocko.com/2020/05/31/making-rss-more-visible-again-with-a-feeds-page-marcus-herrmann/
Personal website owners – what do you think about collecting all of the feeds you are producing in one way or the other on a
/feeds
page?
Sounds like a good idea! I’ll get on that.
You might want to give this a read! https://boffosocko.com/2020/05/31/making-rss-more-visible-again-with-a-feeds-page-marcus-herrmann/
In which Eric says:
Jeremy Keith, you magnificent son of a bitch.
I’ll take it.
Appropriately enough, I read this post in my feed reader.
A personal website is a lovely thing. Nobody will buy this platform and use it as their personal plaything. No advertisers will boycott and send me scrambling to produce different content. No seed funding will run out overnight.
A very timely post on using If This Then That to automatically post notes from your own site (via RSS) to Twitter and Mastodon.
I’ve set this up for my Mastodon profile.
- You’re the curator
- You decide what’s interesting
- You have more control over what you read and how
- It’s a fast and efficient way of reading a lot of web
- It’s just better than the endless scroll of a social media feed
Spot on!
To me, using RSS feeds to keep track of stuff I’m interested in is a good use of my time. It doesn’t feel like a burden, it doesn’t feel like I’m being tracked or spied on, and it doesn’t feel like I’m just another number in the ads game.
To me, it feels good. It’s a way of reading the web that better respects my time, is more likely to appeal to my interests, and isn’t trying to constantly sell me things.
That’s what using RSS feeds feels like.
Nicky Case on RSS:
Imagine an open version of Twitter or Facebook News Feed, with no psy-op ads, owned by no oligopoly, manipulated by no algorithm, and all under your full control.
Imagine a version of the newsletter where you don’t have to worry about them selling your email to scammers, labyrinth-like unsubscribe pages, or stuffing your inbox with ever more crap.
But not like that.
Marking up the books you’re reading for aggregation and visualisation.
Answers to some questions about blogging.
Some handpicked highlights from my blog.
The web is what we make it.