Since I’ve been on Lemmy, I don’t know what my use is for Mastodon anymore. It’s dead on there anyway. I don’t have anyone to talk to and nobody responds to my posts.

  • Anafroj@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think it’s a Mastodon problem. It’s a generalist social network problem. Facebook, Twitter, Mastodon, why are we using those? For some, it’s “to keep in touch” with friends and family, and they’re happy seeing any activity, preferably things that makes them smile (that’s more Facebook). For others, it’s a mean to build street cred in their industry by publicly saying on topic things that sound smart (that was Twitter). But if you look for interesting discussions on things you like, in order to learn something, they’re terrible at that. It’s where specialized communities, discussing only one topic, shine. It used to be forums, then reddit, now lemmy. RSS is also a very good way to get that kick.

      • Anafroj@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        It’s a feed protocol for websites. Each time you see that icon, it’s a RSS feed :

        RSS icon

        You have a RSS client, a program you use to display your news. In it, you paste the url of the RSS feed of the various websites you want to follow, and just like that, you have an app in which you can go every morning to see what’s new in your favorite websites, all at once.

        Now, the problem of course is that not every website, by far, is offering RSS feeds, so you have to look for those who provide one. RSS is popular among techies and journalists, so press and tech blogs are where they are the most common. On top of that, there are many websites having RSS feed without even knowing it, because they use Wordpress or other engines that automatically provide RSS feeds. Those are a bit more tricky to get your hand on, because there is no link anywhere on their page, you have to look in the source code of the page (using Control + u) to find an “alternate rss” or “atom” link. It used to be automatically detected by browsers, showing an icon in the url bar when a RSS feed was detected, but it’s not the case anymore. You can still install a browser extension to make them appear, like this (chrome) or this (firefox).

        For the record, youtube has RSS feeds for all publishers, reddit has RSS feeds for all subs, most major news websites have RSS site, so it’s quite useful, provided you can find the feed urls.

        Then, to actually aggregate the news, you need a RSS client in which to paste those feed urls. There are tons of them. Name your favorite platform, there probably are a dozen RSS clients for it. Mobile, web, desktop, it’s everywhere. So pick the one you like best. :) You just have to search for "RSS client for ". A couple popular exemples : The Old Reader on the web and Thunderbird (which is also a mai client) on desktop.

          • Anafroj@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            You can think of it like that, a scrapbook that updates everyday with new things about your chosen subjects. Or you can think of it as a newspaper in which there are only news about things you like. It’s quite close to a Facebook/Twitter feed where you would follow companies/projects/artists you like, with the notable difference that there is not a centralized authority (the owners of Faceook or Twitter) who can decide to change your experience (by altering what you see, removing some content, adding some ads or whatever). Oh, and also, you can’t comment. :) (but the articles you’re reading in your aggregator have links to their original web page, which often contain a comment section).