Unlike traditional online news sources, email newsletters come directly to you—right into your inbox and straight from a writer or publication you know and trust. At the same time, email can be a crowded and complicated place. Newsletters get mixed in with important messages, urgent reminders, and even annoying promotions. I'm thinking of interacting not in a streaming manner but in a slow-paced environment. In addition, the articles in my inbox create personal content storage for me, which I can leverage in future research. Unfortunately, most newsletters are not indexable, so the only way to search is to rely on your email-client built-in search engine.
How are you dealing with that? Sounds like some Gmail management can handle that, but maybe there are some prominent startups in that field?
https://cloudnativesimplified.substack.com/p/why-am-i-introd...
I have one for you. It is called readwise [1].
They recently showed some cool AI experiments [2]. They could eventually solve some of the problems you cited like better search with natural language and better Information overload management with controlled summarization.
Feedly (already cited here) is the mature "News Reader" app. Readwise is the cool “Read it later" app. The perpective is difference, but they do share a lot of features (including AI powered ones)
[2] https://twitter.com/deadly_onion/status/1592990487257829376
Each day I go through 300 articles using shortcuts :
n -> go to the next p -> go to the previous m -> mark as read x -> discard o -> open
I do my daily curation this way. I would say I read roughly 5% of the articles/content.
But it's pretty quick and I am aware of new major versions of programming languages/frameworks I use.
New products, interesting newsletter content, etc.