Just noticed that Firefox now downloads feeds (Atom, RSS), which is a little less than helpful. 🙄
@movq@uninformativ.de interesting point.
Perhaps you’ve seen the official take title
personally, I haven’t used Feeds like I used to do 10+ ago. I don’t care about following blogs anymore, but following people and topics (on Twitter, Twtxt, etc) and curated content (newsletters, a bit of pinterest…), I don’t read news anymore. I listed to a lot of podcast but the directories get the Feed URL for me.
Perhaps that’s a bad habit remaining from social media usage. Changing how I consume/get periodic content. Makes me think 🤔
@movq@uninformativ.de yeah, I agree on the Feed icon and discoverability in general, following the trend that most web 2.0 services stopped supporting RSS (in 2010 I think?).
Again, it’s like they don’t want the common user to know that exists, perhaps for not promoting browsing the web but an alternative way to consume content (hiding most ads in the process)
And then Firefox includes Pocket, which is the first thing I disable 🙃
I read about it a few years ago… http://camendesign.com/blog/rss_is_dying
I’m thinking if by 2022 that has changed significantly (at least it’s not RSS anymore, but Atom and other hipster formats, I’m talking about Feeds as a concept)
If I can add something, I disable now all the Home Pages with news. I don’t care about them anymore, but I like models like Reddit/HackerNews/Lobste.ts/Antenna.
More in the model “I’ll check them when I want, not when you are pushing it to me”
But that’s another discussion.
For people born after the 90s (no one here I suppose), this was Active Desktop:
Instead of a static image, show a Dynamic Web page refreshed every X minutes. Good memories of the old .com web portals of that age