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by nplusone 5336 days ago
Still, it would be nice to be able to create groups to watch and filter repositories and users on GitHub.
1 comments

That's a good answer to Zach. I'm having problem of too much noise when I follow a lot of projects and people on GitHub.
What are you trying to accomplish by following projects on github? Maybe they can make activity on projects more meaningful, like show you more activity if you're a committer or only big commits if the project is very active but you don't often click on activity items.
That's the point: it's very difficult to automatically determine what someone wants when they follow a project. Sometimes I only want to bookmark it because I know I'll find it useful in the future. Other times, I only care when a new stable version of it is released, with a changelog. When I'm a participant I want to see more details, like new issues or commits.

Instead, because of the lack of options, we're left with an unusable wall of notifications. Smaller projects get drowned out by larger ones, and it tells me every little detail of what is going on with every single project. I'm pretty sure I've never clicked on a single link from it in the past few years of using GitHub.

Plug: I built a Chrome extension called "GitHub Feed Filter" https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/jcpkhafkpnaljjbgdg... precisely for this reason. The notifications are just too many when you follow too many projects.