The net effect was you could make your own news feeds / timelines and use code to control how they were filtered / combined / etc... It was crazy powerful (for 2005) and I still miss it _today_ since it had the dynamism of the news feed, some of the social aspect, and total control since there was no algorithm other than your and the people's who's list you subscribed to curation and any code you ran against it.
Not a lot left from those long ago days but I did find one slightly-cringy video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45DSrU23sPI
:)
Feeds are a tangent solution because they give you only the new stuff. Feeds transform blogs into social media platforms where what matter is the new fresh content, ready to "feed" the algorithm. But blogs and personal sites are different. High quality content is usually written in a single article, maybe in the past, and it will not be shown on your feed.
Actually I judge a blog on what's already written in there, so I want to read more articles but maybe just not right now. If I add the blog to my RSS reader I would only read future content.
Another patch to this problem is Instapaper. I can save there the most interesting articles and read them later, but the entire-blog view is missing.
I would like to have a way (platform) where I can save a blog and read all/some articles, with a standard formatting (custom blogs are nice but not always comfortable to read) and not having a default sorting for recent articles.
Why? All the old articles are there as well.
[1] https://web.archive.org/web/20251005163816/http://blogfeeds....
[2] https://developers.cloudflare.com/support/troubleshooting/ht...
But this strikes me as a problem that can be solved, and potentially already has been.
If I go to a newsreeder the first time, it's empty. I have to decide what to follow.
If you can get me to add a few blogs of interest, you start understanding what I want to read.
I can then subscribe and follow, just like I would on twitter, and you can present new stuff to me, so I'm never showing up without something new.
I suspect this is something like what substack is doing, but that means all the blogs have to be on substack.
I never go to substack to browse, I go there when a link sends me there.
If there was a service that I as a blog-writer can submit my feed to, and that service is managing the promotion of my blog to the right readers, that would be a benefit, and I wouldn't feel locked in.
I'm sure this has been done, why did it fail?
> so I'm never showing up without something new.
I like a feed I can fully consume and then move on, filling it with endless content would make it less valuable to me.
Maybe you could even set "I only want to see a maximum of 5 new posts a day" or something like that.
I wonder with the right incentives if this could be run as a distributed open-source service.
The last thing I want is another service with an algorithm.
RSS by itself is devoid of that, which is an appealing feature.
Does everything have to be a fucking product?????
How do you overcome the discoverability problem with RSS.
It isn't a "product", it's a solution to a problem.
I find things I like, I add them to RSS reader. I don't have thousands or hundreds of things in there, maybe a few dozen.
"Make it easy for users to find things" - if they can find a website, they can find an RSS feed. I'm sure any LLM with Deep Research would be great for that.
I think this is blessing _and_ a curse. I had an idea that I built a while back that centralizes RSS feeds so you get the centralized benefits of social media while authors can own and control their own content.
If anyone's curious, I built it out here: https://onread.io but I never had the time to really share it out or push it beyond the SUPER basic MVP that it currently is. I was thinking about pivoting it more into a tool that I could turn into an RSS feed for myself, but I haven't found the time, really.
Either way, I don't think RSS feeds as-is are as useful as they once were, and social media still has significant value over feeds due to conversation, sharing of content to folks with similar taste and interests, etc.
The social component is exactly the problem for many.
And here is my "rss reader": https://jurakovic.github.io/dev-links/news/ :)
Although I myself don't have a blog, for past few months I think about starting a new one. We'll see.
Then we could all share our pipes and build better ones on top of existing pipes. The thing with Pipes was that you could also filter feeds and use Pipes as feeds for other pipes ... Yahoo! Pipes was a great product that was way ahead of its time.
If anyone is interested in actually replicating this, then I would suggest using Node-RED[2] as a stand-in for Pipes.
[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yahoo!_Pipes
[2]: https://nodered.org
I actually found www.pipes.digital in my mind map with a comment to the effect that it's a Yahoo! pipes replacement - so I come across it a year ago in fact.
I'm sticking to Node-RED simply because that's what I know - also its open source and very extendable, so that's why its my cup of tea.
EDIT: Pipes is also open source --> https://github.com/pipes-digital/pipes --> sorry didn't see that.
RSS is far better than a (digest) newsletter; you can browse individual posts at your own pace, keep some unread for later, and revisit them across sessions.
With newsletters, you either read the whole thing in one sitting or leave the email unarchived forever.
If only every newsletter had an RSS feed. But of course they don't - can't show you ads!
> You certainly can try to find ways to monetize through platforms like Substack, it's truly up to you. The key is building a network of people who want to talk together!
Hmm. This is one of the reasons why this won't take off unless the blog is on Substack and people are making money out of it.
But then again power laws are brutal, which is why Substack has got good discovery, ordinary wordpress/ghost/jekyll/ssg websites and blogs with RSS don't.
There needs to be a way to gate web / RSS content + discoverability behind hit for those who don't want to go onto Substack, especially now with AI crawlers scraping blog content from authors for free.
Otherwise the only way to make money from your writing would be to use Substack.
I consider it also a good way to force myself to keep thoughts in order and to do a recap on the activities I do that most of the time are very chaotic.
I would probably consider integrating messages also to receive feedbacks.
I use hugo with the backend hosted on GitHub Pages, so far is a pretty solid setup that requires minimal effort since I just wrote an action to build pages every time a commit is done on the main branch
In case you are interested: https://appsec.space
All for people doing their own sites/blogs. But social media is the RSS feed and has been for like 15 years. Short form posts that link to long form posts. Social posts that link to the content you've published wherever. And the reposting of other curated favorites is the extra feed portion. The change in recent years is ppl skipping the self-hosting/POS part of the POSSE and posting directly on the social media sites because they were convinced to do that and the social media sites were discouraging users from travelling off-site etc. We just need to get away from using social media sites as the hosts of our content and back to the POS part.
https://web.archive.org/web/20250801000000*/https://blogfeed...
Looks like recently in 2025
This is usually called a "blogroll", which has the advantage of being much less ambiguous/overloaded than "feeds".
P.S. for people whore not really into RSS, we are also Beta testing the option to subscribe to searches and get results in email digests. Same idea, but you don’t need to bother finding an RSS reader.
But I found a ton of great blogs just scanning through other people's blogrolls.
Serendipity implements all three now, so there are definitely still blog engines that support these mechanisms.
Examples: /Serendipity, /Sheets, /News /Numbers, /Files, /Drive, /Translate, /Play, etc.
Exceptions: If the context is clear, i.e., in a text talking about Google assets where News, Sheets, Drive, Play, are mentioned; or one prefixes the context with “The software Serendipity…”.
We should not assume everyone in the world knows every single title of every single software and service.
I Imagine the risk of spam is the same as for pingbacks, but at the moment this doesn't seem to be the case yet.
https://andregarzia.com/2024/05/feed-and-blogrolls-discovery...
Also https://blogcat.org has the same feature but is a full blog reader.
It is cool to surface blogrolls like that.
I could see a service where you paste in a URL of anything you find interesting, then that service going around and finding an RSS feed or newsletter signup and doing it for them... maybe taking off
Whoever "we" is doesn't seem to see the distinction between what is being described here & above and a follow button.
Do you know any good solution, where there is collaborative filtering or RSS (bonus points for open, tweakable algorithm) + some AI with custom prompt to give me top recommendations?
Something where I am in the charge of the algorithm, not the other way around.
The solution is to be okay with missing some things instead of trying to drink from the firehose.
But I had a similar though with newspapers. There are quite a few I like. Yet, there are more articles in one that I can read - especially when I want to have other sources as well. So yeah, if there were only a handful of good blogs, it would be the case. But there is a long tail of interesting stuff there.
Anyway, even for the Hacker News, I would like to filter a bit, so to have feed like the hackernewsletter (which I like a lot), but profiled more to my tastes.
You're more likely to get discovered if your content is on a centralised platform than a decentralised one.
RSS alone doesn't cut it and you cannot know if anyone is reading your content on RSS as there are no interactions or anything.
It feels like this 'solution' is written by someone who just like the 'tech' of RSS and blogs.