What's your web routine?
Infuriatingly, there aren't a lot of options for other topics.
Edit: and /r/dadjokes :)
I use feedly.com to follow HN, blogs, subreddits, and news outlets. I split up "Backlogging" and "Reading" as separate activities, which I think promotes focus when reading.
To "backlog", I browse through my feedly feed of HN/Reddit/blogpost titles, marking the ones that sound interesting to "Read Later".
Then later I read through those "read later' posts, saving the best ones in lists and highlights/notes for the future.
As for specifics,
1. https://www.reddit.com/r/ExperiencedDevs/
HN and stack exchange are the only forums I read frequently. Reddit has much lower average quality.
Occasionally eurogamer for game reviews.
Arstechnica.
I too try and avoid sites like twitter, reddit etc.
Never use Facebook.
Be nice if their was a site where you can say I'm interested in closure, lisp, type theory etc and get recommendations on curated blogs to follow.
[0] readsomethinginteresting.com
I do also regularly hit up CNBC because I think they do a great job of covering world news and big moves in tech and I check my GitHub recommendations on a fairly regular basis.
I would love more “small HN” stuff - neat projects, old articles/blog posts, and generally just normal people.
In addition to those, I often read from the articles listed on my browser extension https://daily.dev/. They have cool developer-first articles
http://news.google.com - headline scouting (use link in sidebar for local news)
http://old.reddit.com - nothing worthwhile to mention
http://linkedin.com - to quick apply for jobs
http://cargo.site/In-Use - design inspiration
http://awwwards.com - design inspiration
http://pluto.tv - see what is on that's interesting
youtube - saved playlists, different tempos for different types of moods/work
My Twitter feed is a pleasant echo chamber tuned to my literary and cinematic taste (almost zero anything else) and it takes at most total 30-40m a week of my time, or less. I don’t even check it daily.
Then there’s 2-3 mailing lists I’m member of where I read/reply 20-30 mins everyday.
iOS Screen Time feature helps but it doesn’t give a nuclear option - “just block - no extension!”.
Surprisingly HN takes quite some of my time and that too for just “checking” it; and if I am being really honest HN also is the most useless and least significant (in any way) of these all such sites. When I look at it holistically over quite some time it’s really monotonous, insipid, and uninspiring. It’s really a regurgitating mass of comments. So no it’s not the quality for sure.
I sometimes succeed in getting off HN for weeks/months and then it again sticks like a leech that I notice when it’s heavy again after having sucked enough.
My browser start page is legiblenews which pulls from there. I usually check cbc.ca, bbc.com or aljazeera if I want something less biased (IMHO), and then this site for the first page or two. Once a week maybe some interest / local city related subreddits e.g. fossdroid, longreads, personalfinancecanada, selfhosted. Professionally for my field I try to read through rheumnow.com at at least skim it as a curated aggregator. I add interesting topics for later to wallabag with wallabagger and sometimes send them to my kindle.
I refuse to use twitter, instagram similar to the poster but I would also add that I refuse to go to youtube for most content or news that could be in written form.
Now that I think of it it has not really been a conscious choice to browse so little. It just happened over the span of a few months. I used to spend hours on reddit/twitch and local news sites, bingewatch tv shows but it looks like I don't care anymore about all that stuff and I like it much better this way. I'm either sitting at my desktop working for work/sideprojects, or I'm away from all screens playing guitar, being outside etc.
Various sub-reddits for other types of news and info (e.g. r/soccer)
Not a web routine, but general routine: I try to make time to read books.
https://unitedsmes.in/services/hop-on-hop-off-and-soft-skill...
I'm partial to the occasional doom-scroll on Twitter as well, especially if something important is occurring in real time (Ukraine invasion comes to mind for this).
I'm trying to spend less time mindlessly browsing. HN is hard to quit because I get lots of reading material from it.
It follows HN in principle in that it is:
1) curated, not by my "interests", or clicks, or browser history, but proper moderation (and puns!)
and 2) doesn't do the ajaxy infinity-load content.
It seems to be impossible to have a quality news source that is both algorithmic and never-ending.
Hackaday for interesting usually hardware projects. But a lot of articles are covering stuff from a few days earlier.
I try to stay away from Reddit for the most part.
I have an RSS feed of mostly AI and Tech blogs from big companies. I could probably curate it some more.
Reddit, hn and some niche stuff
the player aid, war on the rocks, foreign policy
scripting.com, daring fireball
le monde, el pais, financial times
psyche.co, long reads
I follow a handful of interesting people via Twitter.
All the rest I consume via RSS — I follow about 380 feeds at the moment. I use Miniflux.app as backend (hosted plan), Reeder on my phone and NetNewsWire on my Mac.
- Wikipedia
- Aeon.co
- Quanta Magazine
- FT / Bloomberg / WSJ start pages
/r/wallstreetbets
Tiktok
old.reddit.com/r/all
news.ycombinator.com
lite.cnn.io
darksky