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I'm a little over 20 and I have used RSS and did not continue. I just don't see why I would want RSS over something like hacker news or visiting my local news website directly. Subscribing to blogs directly creates a huge firehose of mostly boring content while sites like HN sort content vaguely by how interesting it is.

As well as the fact that most of the time, the actual content of the article is less interesting than the discussion it starts in the comments. I imagine most people checking reddit or HN are not there to read a long post but instead looking to discuss various opinions in the comments which RSS does not support.



Blogs and websites that generate lots of content are akin to News. You don't subscribe to them, and have HN to let you know of something important happens.

RSS is for the long tail of blogs that don't post very frequently, but when they do, its worth your while.

The ideal entry in my RSS feed is one that has new addition once per week or less. This way, I can follow a very wide array of people without getting overwhelmed, nor having to miss if their post don't make it to HN front.


I guess the reinvented solution for this use case is email newsletters, that substack and the like have popularized recently. Most people have an email client, no matter how grudgingly.


Email... defeats half the purpose of RSS. With RSS, you control what you want to receive and when. Its a pull mechanism. With email, it becomes push and then it gets abused. Remember when smartphone notifications were actual notifications with useful alert/content? Nowadays they are just another advertisement delivery channel.

That's why RSS is still important, and why RSS feeds should not be delivered via Email.


Guess what? Substack supports RSS. Every substack has a feed.


> RSS is for the long tail of blogs that don't post very frequently, but when they do, its worth your while.

How do you find those?


From my own experience: search for blogs of favorite writers, observe aggregate sites like Hacker News and Reddit for authors with a style that resonates with you (subreddits of niche topics are often surprisingly rich in a good content), search for niche topics that are of interest to you, ask friends about any interesting content.


Its organic discovery. Some I come across in HN discussions. Some I find while googling stuff. Since my interests aren't mainstream, most of the blogs I come across this way are interesting to me and I subscribe.

These days there are few awesome lists or the like for curated, sorted and tagged personal blogs too. Its a great time to start with RSS.


HN’s front page has an RSS feed, that’s how I get to it for titles that catch my interest. 98% of the time I go to the comments first, more often than not I never go to the actual article (this one, for example).


> Subscribing to blogs directly creates a huge firehose of mostly boring content

It's possible that you're reading the wrong blogs.




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