This is so overwhelming! I wonder how feasible it would be to get Alexa traffic rankings or something similar to prioritize the list? I'm guessing the subdomains might be an issue but there's so much content here I don't know where to start (other than the blogs I already read of course).
Yes, it is a bit much (I hate that people nowadays use the "curated" label for lists that seem like they just collected everything they could find for a category. Which is fine, but not curated)
I don't think Alexa traffic rankings would correlate all that well to quality.
Grouping them by specialization instead of company name might be interesting, and possibly could be done using some company data set or with text analysis.
The format Dan Luu used in http://danluu.com/programming-blogs/ is probably the way to go. A short explanation of what the blog is about, why he finds it interesting, and linking to a couple of individual posts as examples.
Though it probably requires a consistent authorial voice. So it'd only work for genuine "this is the stuff I read" curation, not for "send a pull request to get your own blog included".
Take submissions for summaries and require that new content/ pull requests provide one. For the record, I'm enjoying everything I've read so far from the list, so thank you.
I always try to subscribe to individual blogs whenever I see individual posts make it on HackerNews. It gives me a good pool of stuff to look at that often gets overlooked.
I think it'd be interesting to import the OPML file into a separate RSS reader (so not to pollute my already quite large list of subscriptions) and comb through the daily individual posts.
I just added the OPML to my Feedly without even thinking about how long it's going to take to unsubscribe from all of the ones I don't care about. The second I hit upload it hit me.
I don't think so. For the individual blogs, most people only write one or two a month. If you import the OPML into RSS OWL, you can go through and look for stuff that interests you. If you find a blog that frequently has interesting stuff, add the feed to your primary on-line reader.
These types of lists are good for people who do nothing but submit to HN/Reddit/Voat all day when they should be working. O:-)