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RSS Zero isn't the path to RSS Joy

2023-07-29

Feed overload is real

The week before last, Katie shared with me that article from last month, Who killed Google Reader? I'd read it before so I didn't bother clicking through again, but we did end up chatting about RSS a bit (You'd  be forgiven for thinking that RSS was my favourite topic, given that so-far-this-year I've written about improving WordPress's feeds, about mathematical quirks in FreshRSS, on using XPath scraping as an RSS alternative (twice), and the joy of getting notified when a vlog channel is ressurected (thanks to RSS). I swear I have other interests.).

Screenshot: Google Reader Notifier popup advises of "461 unread items".

Katie "abandoned feeds a few years ago" because they were "regularly ending up with 200+ unread items that felt overwhelming".

Conversely: I think that dropping your feed reader because there's too much to read is... solving the wrong problem.

A white man with dark hair, wearing jeans and a t-shirt, moves to push over a stack of carboard boxes, each smaller than the one beneath it. From bottom to top, the boxes are labelled: stress, email client, mobile pings, doomscrolling, social media silos... and the very top, very smallest box, which glows with sunbeams emitted from it, reads "rss reader".

Dave Rupert last week wrote about his feed reader's "unread" count having grown to a mammoth 2,000+ items, and his plan to reduce that.

I think that he, like Katie, might be looking at his reader in a different way than I do mine.

FreshRSS sidebar, showing 567 unread items (of which 1 are comics, 2 are friends, 186 are communities, 1 are distractions, 278 are geeky, 1 is "me", 57 are youtube, 13 are strangers, 1 is software, 7 are rss club, 29 are podcasts, and 3 are polyamory. A further 107 are marked as favourites. The "friends" and "rss club" categories are showing warning triangles.

RSS is not email!

I've been in the position that Katie and David describe: of feeling overwhelmed by the sheer volume of unread items. And I know others have, too. So let me share something I've learned sooner:

There's nothing special about reaching Inbox Zero in your feed reader.

It's not noble nor enlightened to get to the bottom of your "unread" list.

Your ?  feed ? reader ? is ? not ? an ? email ? client. ?

The idea of Inbox Zero as applied to your email inbox is about productivity. Any message in your email might be something that requires urgent action, and you won't know until you filter through and categorise .

But your RSS reader doesn't (shouldn't?) be there to add to your to-do list. Your RSS reader is a list of things you might like to read. In an ideal world, reaching "RSS Zero" would mean that you've seen everything on the Internet that you might enjoy. That's not enlightened; that's sad!

Google Reader's "Congratulations, you've reached the End of the Internet." Easter Egg screen, shown when all your feeds are empty.

Use RSS for joy

My RSS reader is a place of joy, never of stress. I've tried to boil down the principles that makes it so, and here they are:

And if you'd like to put those tips in your RSS reader to digest later or at your own pace, you can:  here's an RSS feed containing (only) these RSS tips!

Links

Katie's DreamWidth weblog

Who killed Google Reader?, on The Verge

My blog post: Better WordPress RSS Feeds

My blog post: Mathematical Quirks in FreshRSS

My blog post: New Far Side comics in FreshRSS using XPath

My blog post: Far Side Daily Dose comics via XPath in FreshRSS

My blog repost: Satoru Iwata's First Commercial Game Has A Secret, which I discovered thanks to RSS

Dave Rupert's blog

Dave Rupert's blog post: One friend a day

End Of The Internet

My blog post: BBC News... Without The Sport

My blog note: "My @FreshRSS installation is the first, last, and sometimes only place I go on the Internet."

Article explaining how to find the semi-secret URLs of RSS feeds of YouTube channels and playlists

My blog post: XPath Scraping with FreshRSS

My blog post (and associated vlog): Dog; Person, in which I talk about adopting our dog

Feedly

Inoreader

The Old Reader

FreshRSS

Tiny Tiny RSS

AboutFeeds.com, which provides tips on getting started with a feed reader

Slack

(Official/in-house) Slack plugin that adds RSS feed support to Slack

Link to an RSS feed containing (only) these RSS tips