Blogs Are Back
A browser-based RSS reader that stores everything locally. There’s also a directory you can explore to get you started.
I am going to continue to write this newsletter. I am going to spend hours and hours pouring over old books and mailing lists and archived sites. And lifeless AI machines will come along and slurp up that information for their own profit. And I will underperform on algorithms. My posts will be too long, or too dense, or not long enough.
And I don’t care. I’m contributing to the free web.
A browser-based RSS reader that stores everything locally. There’s also a directory you can explore to get you started.
Rob has redesigned his site and it’s looking gorgeous.
I really like the categories he’s got for his blog.
I like the idea of adding this to personal websites:
Mastodon shows an “Alt” button in the bottom right of images that have associated alt text. This button, when clicked, shows the alt text the author has written for the image.
The web is just people. Lots of people, connected across global networks. In 2005, it was the audience that made the web. In 2025, it will be the audience again.
I see the personal website as being an antidote to the corporate, centralised web. Yeah, sure, it’s probably hosted on someone else’s computer – but it’s a piece of the web that belongs to you. If your host goes down, you can just move it somewhere else, because it’s just HTML.
Sure, it’s not going to fix democracy, or topple the online pillars of capitalism; but it’s making a political statement nonetheless. It says “I want to carve my own space on the web, away from the corporations”. I think this is a radical act. It was when I originally said this in 2022, and I mean it even more today.
Read the book I wrote about service workers. It’s all yours.
Serendipity is the best algorithm.
@adactio.com@adactio.com
Updating my website with related posts and fixing link rot.
Hodgepodges and through lines.