People on here and Ars resonate with me, so I figure ask and see if there are others that might interest to me or other members of the community.
I'll start. I religiously check these sites, in this order, maybe 4-5 times a day:
1. Sydney Morning Herald (smh.com.au)
2. news.com.au
3. Ars Technica (arstechnica.com)
4. Hacker News (here)
5. Politico (politico.com)
6. Fox News (foxnews.com)
I have a small list of blogs I follow.
* https://www.scottaaronson.com
* https://thezvi.wordpress.com
Like a barbarian, I check them every day instead of using RSS or even paying attention to their update schedules. In aggregate, I get about one new post to read every day.
When I'm in the mood to know what's going on in the world, I check:
I also follow the alternative weekly for a reality check on what I read here on HN.
Edit: formatting
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Current_events
3. YouTube (Daily Dose Of Internet, Two Minute Papers, Sebastian Lague)
4. Roblox
5. keyhero.com
2. HN (all day, every day)
3. YouTube (Here are the channels I subscribe to) https://www.youtube.com/user/ka9dgx/channels
4. Slashdot (It once saved me from having my office without internet for 6 months, when our ISP suddenly went away, and I got in line first for 2 replacement ISPs, we always had 2 after that)
5. Reddit (Lots of programming related stuff)
6. Twitter (To vent into the void, rather than here)
7. Facebook (To see what my friends are up to) Be sure to use this url for reverse-chronological listings: https://www.facebook.com/?sk=h_chr
There used to be more.
It is my digital equivalent of roaming in a library, and finding random new books.
news.google.com
ncangler.com
https://waterdata.usgs.gov/nwis/uv?site_no=02097314
wral.com/weather
Youtube
http://phins.com/phins-news.php
There are others that I check "frequently" but not necessarily "every day" including lwn.net, various sub-reddits (/r/machinelearning, /r/semanticweb, /r/artificial, etc.), various stack exchange sites, etc.
I am increasingly finding Twitter very hard to follow. And it isn't the content but my usage patten doesn't fit it. I want it to be more like a RSS Reader where all of my followed account are listed. And categorised by their Topic. So these group of people belongs to Tech, those belongs to politics etc...
https://wiki.nikitavoloboev.xyz/research/staying-on-top-of-t...
HN
News.google.com
Linkedin.com
youtube.com
highscalability.com (weekly)
https://finshots.in/archive/ (mostly indian news though)
gmail., live.com (duh)
dev.to
stackoverflow (not that i have to , but i end up visiting anyways)
medium (i have cut down my usage a lot)
and many many more!!!
and many many more!
If it's weekly, the list would include some subreddits on Reddit (I like /r/ArtisanVideos), a local newspaper aggregator, our local Covid-19 official news, and some social media site.
I do check some other sites of projects that I like and support such as FreeBSD, Debian, PostgreSQL, Clojure, ... or very local businesses that I support (local bakery, local foodshop, ...) on a monthly basis.
2) Facebook: family, friends, and topics of interest.
3) Twitter about 3 or 4 times a week or when something topical occurs.
4) Youtube: first goto for educational and some entertainment videos
5) Amazon: shopping and prime videos
6) Netflix
7) EBay: some things are much cheaper here than Amazon, also bargain hunting and some selling
8) Yahoo finance: stock market
9) Google search, gmail, maps, translate
10) Craigslist: local stuff
11) Wikipedia - background on any topic + read home page daily
1. Cloudflare Radar https://radar.cloudflare.com/
2. Cloudflare Blog https://blog.cloudflare.com/
3. GitHub Trending https://github.com/trending
1. reddit.com/r/reddevils [For all things Manchester United]
2. substack : I try to write on a regular basis and this is also a place where I subscribe to newsletters. Some of my reading happens here.
3. nytimes : I have not been on this frequently. A break from news :)
4. hackernews : Out of habit almost.
-Reddit (For tech news from niche subreddits)
-Twitter (For the political controversy of the day)
-Hacker News (for more tech news)
-Mastodon (Instance not important / more tech news usually)
-Google News (For a overview of all news items)
Professional:
-LinkedIn (For networking and industry updates)
-Salesforce (For sales and support of customers)
-Atlassian Suite (For visibility of everything in the company)
Media:
-YouTube: For Tech Hobbyist stuff.
-Archive.org: For unique entertainment.
amazon-adsystem.com
doubleclick.com
events.launchdarkly.com
fullstory.com
trafficjunky.net
(HackerNews RSS via http://hnapp.com/, FYI)
> Arts & Letters Daily began in 1998 in the belief that the internet could be a vehicle for meaningful intellectual exchange. We’ve since linked to more than 17,000 articles, book reviews, and essays, an archive that adds up to a thinking person’s guide to the world of art and ideas. Denis Dutton, our late founder, called Arts & Letters Daily a "reading list — with attitude," which sums it up just right.
- Hacker News
- Jira (except weekends)
- Edabit (leetcode practice)
- YouTube (for videos and music listening)
- LinkedIn (job boards)
news.ycombinator.com
arxiv.org
google.com
https://webshuffle.mickschroeder.com/
I bookmark https://webshuffle.mickschroeder.com/redirect so I can click it to "channel surf" the web
I sometimes get lost going down rabbitholes in here:
1. skewed-narrow-debilitating-cringe.com
2. wars-are-good-for-my-stock-portfolio.com
3. jesus-jesus-uber-ales.com
4. raging-neurotic-troll-gangs-everywhere.com
1. Slashdot
2. News.Google.com
3. Hacker news/GitHub issues and discussions
4. Reddit (politics, late stage capitalism, world news)/4chan/various .win sites (to understand both sides of political aisle)
5. Arstechnica/osnews.com
6. My personal kanban/logs/notifications aggregator webapps
Mine (Not including work-related apps or Gmail)
* Hacker News (news.ycombinator.com)
* Reddit (old.reddit.com)
* NY Times (nytimes.com)
* Polygon PC games (polygon.com/pc)
* ProductHunt (producthunt.com)
* Wired (wired.com)
* Behance (behance.net)
* Dribbble (dribbble.com)
Lol
I do not understand people that follow news pubs on social media. It is an automated firehose of headlines shown in no particular order, and the vast majority of them are not going to be of interest to the average reader. The website itself offers a far more pleasant browsing experience.
2. old.reddit.com
3. news.ycombinator.com
4. earth.nullschool.net for weather
5. fivethirtyeight.com
6. nytimes.com
7. Youtube, Google maps and mail, Wikipedia as utility services
(this morning I was trying to open a bottle of liquid soap and the damned thing kept just spinning without popping up, so I googled “how to open a liquid soap dispenser” and first link was a Youtube video that explained you just have to screw the outer ring down tighter before twisting it open. Amazing)
Less than daily,
8. xkcd.com and oglaf.com about once a week
9. slatestarcodex.com, paulgraham.com, maybe lesswrong.com for spelunking through archives
2. news.google.com
3. lichess.org (mostly for doing some puzzles)
4. globo.com
* Youtube -> Print.in -> Cut the clutter + National interest
* Reddit -> Manga & Soccer
* HN
* My stocks / investments
Techmeme
NewsBlur for RSS feeds (newsblur.com)
Email - fastmail.com, hey.com, purelymail.com
R coding - https://www.r-bloggers.com
COVID related: vaccine tracker (https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations), Apple's mobility tracker (https://covid19.apple.com/mobility)
nytimes.com
Endpts for biotech news (https://endpts.com/news/)
Nature (https://www.nature.com)
Science (https://science.sciencemag.org)
Techmeme
TechCrunch
R/programming
Reuters
The best change I made was to never visit nytimes, etc. Far too addictive and designed to enrage.
2. https://hckrnews.com - Great HN aggregation
3. https://forecast.weather.gov/product.php?site=MPX&issuedby=M... - The forecast discussion from my local National Weather Service Office. These are great, written by an actual person providing color commentary on the weather in my area.
4. http://techmeme.com - Tech news aggregator
ZeroHedge
WallStreetOasis
Axios
ChessTempo / LiChess
* news.ycombinator.com
* calendar.google.com
* mail.gmail.com
* old.reddit.com
* twitter.com [website, not app]
* google.com
* github.com
* youtube.com
* amazon.com
* craigslist.com
* locals.com
* ebay.com [and site I own related to ebay]
* netflix.com
reddit,
ttrss,
ptp, kg,
leetcode (since I finally realized a lot of my unhappiness at workplace(s) have been due to not being, almost always, interview-ready)
1. Hacker news (via RSS)
2. Washington Post
3. Ars Technica (via RSS)
4. Fox News
5. Various law & technology blogs & twitter feeds (via RSS)
6. Bluesnews.com
* Zerohedge
* Coinmarketcap
* StackOverflow
2. Hacker News
3. Reddit (programming/hobby subreddits)
4. YouTube if I have time to spare
Probably not much else.
2. Twitter
3. Star Slate Codex https://slatestarcodex.com/ - I've been reading through some of Scott's great writing since the whole NYTimes things brought Scott to my attention.
reply
2. Kaiser Health News
* https://reclaimthenet.org/ for news on free speech and cancel culture
* https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNdA_qZp4eQP5orJ1BsRBWA for wisdom from Thomas Sowell
* https://newdiscourses.com/ for educating myself on critical race theory
Youtube
Wikipedia
Letterboxd
Feedly
Amazon
Lately the list has also included Zillow, but that's a temporary state of affairs.
Youtube(every evening);
Stackoverflow(for work related stuff);
Paul Skallas’ blog(https://paulskallas.substack.com/);
xkcd
https://towardsdatascience.com/
I do not use any RSS reader(I never liked them), instead I subscribe to mailing lists to receive updates via emails.
1. GitHub
1. Sublime Text Forums
1. Hacker News
2. The Financial Times (ft.com)
3. HN
4. Wikipedia
5. DuckDuckGo
6. NPR (npr.org)
7. DW (dw.de)
mmafighting.com
dailymail
reddit.com/r/cosnow
* HN
* Youtube
* Coursera
YouTube
Bounce between links among the above pages
1) HackerNews
2) GitHub
3) Browsing my own email box since I’m subscribed to alot of mailing lists
4) Lobste.rs
5) Reddit
* lobste.rs
* /r/rust
* tagesspiegel.de
* coinmarketcap.com/portfolio
* linkedin.com
* youtube.com
* realvision.com
Apart from the list below I also read and subscribe to a few different local news sources. Over the last several years, local news has been dying (financial issues) and I think that's a bad thing because it means you miss things happening around you that affect your life more so than national news, and because you only get a homogeneous national perspective (often reduced to a left versus right axis) instead of the more diverse issue-to-issue variation that is possible locally. I recommend identifying a few local sources near you if you have the time to read!
UNCATEGORIZED
1. Hacker News (I check the first couple pages several times a day)
2. Matt Taibbi (https://taibbi.substack.com - investigative reporting by a former Rolling Stone journalist)
3. Glenn Greenwald (https://greenwald.substack.com - cofounder of The Intercept, known for breaking Snowden's revelations)
4. Quillette (https://quillette.com/ - a news journal for intellectual conversations on controversial topics)
5. Stratechery (https://stratechery.com/ - analysis of news and economics of the tech industry)
6. ArsTechnica (https://arstechnica.com/ - tech news, although I've seen increasing left-bias where their stories intersect with politics)
LEFT LEANING NEWS
1. New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/ - just their notifications typically)
2. Washington Post (washingtonpost.com/ - just their notifications typically, but it seems like a mirror of NYT for the most part)
3. ProPublica (https://www.propublica.org/ - non-profit investigative journalism)
4. The Economist (https://www.economist.com/ - good for economic news and international current affairs)
5. Vox (https://www.vox.com/ - news with a progressive bias)
6. Jacobin (https://www.jacobinmag.com/ - news with a far-left/socialist bias)
CENTRIST NEWS
1. The Hill (https://thehill.com/ - in my opinion, perhaps the most balanced news source out there today)
2. Axios (https://www.axios.com/ - useful if you're short on time because of how they summarize articles)
3. Wall Street Journal (their push notifications and The 10-Point, which is an email newsletter summarizing the Top 10 stories of the day, a members only benefit)
4. The New Paper (thenewpaper.co - free email newsletter summarizing the top stories of the day)
5. All Sides (https://www.allsides.com - a multi-source news aggregator, with bias ratings)
6. Ground News (https://ground.news/ - a multi-source news aggregator, with bias ratings)
RIGHT LEANING NEWS
1. Fox - (https://www.foxnews.com/ - right leaning news)
2. New York Post (https://nypost.com/ - right-leaning news, stick to the News and Opinion and not the tabloid categories)
3. Reason (https://reason.com/ - I hesitate to label them right-leaning. They're pretty balanced and centrist, and libertarian more than right-biased)
4. The Post Millennial (https://thepostmillennial.com/ - a newer news site that is willing to challenge the coverage of left-biased mainstream sources)
5. The Federalist (https://thefederalist.com/ - right-biased news and opinion site)
6. The National Review (https://www.nationalreview.com/ - right-biased news and opinion site)
And then there's the usual social media stuff:
1. Reddit - just my main feed, carefully curated to unsubscribe from all the major subreddits, which are toxic and constantly brigaded
2. Instagram - I preferred Instagram when it wasn't overrun with politics and now I see almost exclusively political things due to who I follow. Even though you can't link to things easily, it somehow seems easier than Facebook's slow interface
3. Facebook - it's a wasteland but I mostly use it to follow news shared by particular groups and nothing else
4. LinkedIn - it's become increasingly like Facebook, with people mostly sharing political/activist things, so this may fall off my list soon
5. NextDoor - I try to avoid it because it is a political war zone but it's probably the best way to get hyperlocal neighborhood news
I don't use Twitter anymore at all unless someone or something links me to a specific Twitter thread. I've found that Twitter is by far the most toxic and damaging social media service. I've been much happier, less anxious, and better informed since dropping it and shifting to "slower" news sources.
here's another of many similar link thread posts