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by lenderton
615 days ago
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But the problem is that they have to be hosted on the same platform, which will be set up like a social media site with curated content, otherwise you'll have to spend a lot of time finding them. Maybe you get self-hosted things via github or whatnot, but that's about as non-consumerist as it'll get. And the younger generation is not doing this beyond work-related pages, so eventually the internet-as-literature phase will end. In the past you could type into Google "new mothers discussion board" and immediately find organic, non-corporate socialization geared towards Americans. That ease of use is sort of erroneously gone, and probably not returning. Might I ask...which blogs are you reading? |
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No they don't. I avoid Medium and Substack like the plague. I don't use those sites for discovery at all, and whenever I come across a link to a blog on either of them, I usually regret clicking it.
I end up on plenty of blogs found through various sources. A few I've been reading diligently or on-and-off for many years, others I read one-off articles here and there that I've found through sites like HN.
The blogosphere's death is highly exaggerated, regardless of what TFA says.
> Maybe you get self-hosted things via github or whatnot, but that's about as non-consumerist as it'll get
I don't see that as a bad thing.
> And the younger generation is not doing this beyond work-related pages, so eventually the internet-as-literature phase will end
I don't think it will. I think there will always be enough people writing interesting long-form articles to satisfy my curiosity. Mind you, I don't exclusively read blogs, but I haven't touched social media in 5 or 6 years and that hasn't caused me to run out of interesting things to read.