So for me, it’s 1 for 1. The pile of magazines appears to be good :)
(It’s possible I also just like different stuff than you. I loved reading dusty old National Geographics at my grandparents house when I was a kid. Definitely out of date!)
Getting away from that is a good thing. You shouldn't be interested in everything that is put in front of your face. You don't have the time for it and it's unhealthy to devote your time to consuming it. You should be aiming towards finding what you need, when you need it. You should be the one in command, not some algorithmic feed that is designed to capture and hold your attention.
> random people post random crap on their blogs
I have mixed feelings about blogs. While there are some excellent blogs out there, but it is also one of those formats that are meant to capture one's attention then have them come back for more.
> my RSS feed doesn't algorithmically filter it for me.
I haven't tried looking for it, but there ought to b feed readers that filter based on keyword.
Oftentimes it seems the content between such sites can be somewhat interchangeable. Similar film photography, cycling, hobbies, retro video games, some esoteric programming languages, whatever. Then, the only utility left per each individual site is the assumed specificity of the author themselves, which I usually do not care much about.
To your point, that last bit might matter inside a community.
EXCEPT: I post on HN and some other tech sites occasionally. I do enjoy tech topics and it’s pretty easy to steer clear of topics that don’t interest me (eg, cryptocurrency). I also text frequently with a network of friend-nerds about tech news. Is texting social media?
Admittedly I have a weak spot for YouTube. Their algorithm consistently gives me stuff I love: woodworking videos, gardening videos, science and math videos, and a lot of music I don’t think I would be otherwise exposed to. I basically never read YT comments because most are incredibly low value. So it does not really feel like social media to me.
Beyond that, I spend a lot of time outside. Sometimes with friends, sometimes alone. I went through a phase of work that was grueling and dealt with family health issues at the same time. Being able to get into the woods for a trail run on most mornings usually gave me the calmness and patience I needed to get through a lot of long days.
I am looking forward to trying the Kagi lens people posted about here. I added the “enshittification” Kagi blocklist people mentioned a few days ago and it made a good search experience even better.
Here's small web Hacker News: https://hcker.news/?smallweb=true
[0] curated at: https://github.com/kagisearch/smallweb/blob/main/smallweb.tx...
It’s well worth checking out: https://bearblog.dev/discover/
By viewing it from different angles and reflecting on it in their very own ways, people are organically finding ways to heal from the dopamine trap, by escaping from the endless scroll cage, canned algorithms, and fast-food short videos."
It's sad to know that sobriety groups use addictive tech for check-ins.
> Replace scrolling with building - building out my RSS reader, my website, my personal link connections, my skills in using a static site generator, etc.
I've personally found that this approach is just not enough. Sure, I might be "building" something with distracting stuff just a click away, all the while I'm still sitting, staring at a screen, and, fundamentally, in denial that life is possible without the Web.
Took me a couple of years to come to this realization, I went through the whole schtick of getting off doomscroll portals by deleting accounts and using alternative frontends, using addons on my browser to limit and then block those sites, using screentime limits, removing apps, reducing colors on my phone, getting into static websites, web publishing, audio editing, etc. – all of this effort to end up here, commenting on a VC-backed forum during my working hours, because it requires me to sit in front of a screen.
It's like strapping yourself into the chair from A Clockwork Orange (and managing/maintaining each strap) just to pretend that, for many of us, this tech is not a clear net negative, and that those negatives don't come from all sides, i.e., it's not just particular apps or sites we use, it's the tech itself that makes us stationary, distracted, obsessed, overstimulated, etc.
There's something fundamentally wrong if I'm picking up my distraction device because of a "touch grass" notification, much like trying to fix radiation poisoning by trying a different isotope.
Then again, those that make a more radical shift and get off the web don't waste time publishing blog posts about their framework to get off the web. Of, for that matter, comment on said posts...
duxup•1d ago
A google search for that would be fun.
debo_•1d ago
https://kagi.com/smallweb
duxup•1d ago
meander_water•1d ago
oceanhaiyang•1d ago
https://marginalia-search.com/
https://wiby.me/
cosmicgadget•1d ago
https://seirdy.one/posts/2021/03/10/search-engines-with-own-...
cosmicgadget•1d ago
Joeri•1d ago
MangoToupe•1d ago
I'm afraid I don't quite understand the meaning of this; authentic with respect to what, the world wide web of 30 years ago?
amsterdam_luvr•1d ago
splitbrain•1d ago