40 Causes of Neurodivergent Burnout – sensoryoverload.info
Where are all the banger blog posts?
You can see the impact of LLMs everywhere except the banger blog post statistics
Personal blogs are the best, I love yours and I’ll try and tell you why - Nothing Original Here
A favourite thing to do on a Sunday morning is to make a coffee and then sit catching up on the part of my rss feed containing personal blogs. I...
The internet didn’t kill counterculture—you just won’t find it on Instagram
Collectible but Not Consumeristic
Building community out of strangers: /Blogroll – Tracy Durnell's Mind Garden
Last week, I updated my blogroll to include everyone in my RSS feed reader. While I read a lot of topical blogs and newsletters, I also follow a goodly number of interesting people I don’t know as well as acquaintances. I didn’t include these personal blogs on my blogroll before, but decided it was time to add them.
The case for a better web
There is a growing discontent around the current state of the World Wide Web.
Web 1.0 felt like a place of freedom and creativity. Maybe I'm being romantic, for sure had to have its issues... But remember the whimsical sites in Geocities, the simplicity of email discussion lists or the anonymity of IRC?
A blog post is a very long and complex search query to find fascinating people and make them route interesting stuff to your inbox | Henrik Karlsson
When writing in public, there is a common idea that you should make it accessible. This is a left over from mass media.
The Revenge of the Home Page | New Yorker
As social networks become less reliable distributors of the news, consumers of digital journalism are seeking out an older form of online real estate.
Argument for a Return to Web 1.0
The web was established with the best of intentions. The basic idea was that if everyone could share their thoughts and ideas with the world, the best ones would be vetted and float to the top. The bad ones would be ignored and pushed to the bottom.
The internet used to be fun | kwon.nyc
Personal website manifestos. I’ve been meaning to write some kind of Important Thinkpiece™ on the glory days of the early internet, but every time I sit down to do it, I find another, better piece that someone else has already written. So for now, here’s a collection of articles that to some degree answer the question “Why have a personal website?” with “Because it’s fun, and the internet used to be fun.”