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Your reader, your couch, your rules.

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  • Your reader, your couch, your rules.

    Starting today, both my-notes.dragas.net and it-notes.dragas.net are changing the way they distribute content - on RSS and on the Fediverse alike.

    No more excerpts. No more "read more" links. Full posts, delivered directly to you, wherever you choose to read them.

    Here's why:
    I don't run ads. I don't have paywalls. I don't sell attention, or measure success in page views. I never have, and I have no intention of starting. My blogs exist because I enjoy writing, and because
    some of what I write might be useful - or simply enjoyable - to someone else.
    That's the whole business model. There isn't one.

    When that's the case, there's no reason to keep content behind a click.
    Sending you a teaser and asking you to visit my site would only make sense if I needed you *on my site* - for an impression, for a conversion, for something. I don't. So why would I make you leave your reader, your client, your comfortable corner of the internet, just to come to mine?

    What I want instead is simple: that you can read what I write the way you'd read a book on a cold winter evening, wrapped in a warm blanket. Privately.
    Quietly. On your own terms, in your own space, without anything tracking your eyes or nudging you toward something else.

    Your RSS reader is yours. Your Fediverse instance is yours. The content should be yours too.

    If you're on the Fediverse, you can follow both accounts directly:

    - my-notes → @mynotes

    - it-notes → @itnotes

    These are low-traffic accounts. If you don't want them to get lost in your timeline, feel free to hit the notification bell. I promise it won't make much noise.

    So from now on, it will be.

  • Your reader, your couch, your rules.

    Starting today, both my-notes.dragas.net and it-notes.dragas.net are changing the way they distribute content - on RSS and on the Fediverse alike.

    No more excerpts. No more "read more" links. Full posts, delivered directly to you, wherever you choose to read them.

    Here's why:
    I don't run ads. I don't have paywalls. I don't sell attention, or measure success in page views. I never have, and I have no intention of starting. My blogs exist because I enjoy writing, and because
    some of what I write might be useful - or simply enjoyable - to someone else.
    That's the whole business model. There isn't one.

    When that's the case, there's no reason to keep content behind a click.
    Sending you a teaser and asking you to visit my site would only make sense if I needed you *on my site* - for an impression, for a conversion, for something. I don't. So why would I make you leave your reader, your client, your comfortable corner of the internet, just to come to mine?

    What I want instead is simple: that you can read what I write the way you'd read a book on a cold winter evening, wrapped in a warm blanket. Privately.
    Quietly. On your own terms, in your own space, without anything tracking your eyes or nudging you toward something else.

    Your RSS reader is yours. Your Fediverse instance is yours. The content should be yours too.

    If you're on the Fediverse, you can follow both accounts directly:

    - my-notes → @mynotes

    - it-notes → @itnotes

    These are low-traffic accounts. If you don't want them to get lost in your timeline, feel free to hit the notification bell. I promise it won't make much noise.

    So from now on, it will be.

    @stefano You simply copy-paste the post into snac?

  • @stefano You simply copy-paste the post into snac?

    @mms no, I've modified the rss2text script to include the entire content - in html or markdown format, good for snac: https://brew.bsd.cafe/stefano/rss2text

  • Your reader, your couch, your rules.

    Starting today, both my-notes.dragas.net and it-notes.dragas.net are changing the way they distribute content - on RSS and on the Fediverse alike.

    No more excerpts. No more "read more" links. Full posts, delivered directly to you, wherever you choose to read them.

    Here's why:
    I don't run ads. I don't have paywalls. I don't sell attention, or measure success in page views. I never have, and I have no intention of starting. My blogs exist because I enjoy writing, and because
    some of what I write might be useful - or simply enjoyable - to someone else.
    That's the whole business model. There isn't one.

    When that's the case, there's no reason to keep content behind a click.
    Sending you a teaser and asking you to visit my site would only make sense if I needed you *on my site* - for an impression, for a conversion, for something. I don't. So why would I make you leave your reader, your client, your comfortable corner of the internet, just to come to mine?

    What I want instead is simple: that you can read what I write the way you'd read a book on a cold winter evening, wrapped in a warm blanket. Privately.
    Quietly. On your own terms, in your own space, without anything tracking your eyes or nudging you toward something else.

    Your RSS reader is yours. Your Fediverse instance is yours. The content should be yours too.

    If you're on the Fediverse, you can follow both accounts directly:

    - my-notes → @mynotes

    - it-notes → @itnotes

    These are low-traffic accounts. If you don't want them to get lost in your timeline, feel free to hit the notification bell. I promise it won't make much noise.

    So from now on, it will be.

    @stefano Very nice!

  • Your reader, your couch, your rules.

    Starting today, both my-notes.dragas.net and it-notes.dragas.net are changing the way they distribute content - on RSS and on the Fediverse alike.

    No more excerpts. No more "read more" links. Full posts, delivered directly to you, wherever you choose to read them.

    Here's why:
    I don't run ads. I don't have paywalls. I don't sell attention, or measure success in page views. I never have, and I have no intention of starting. My blogs exist because I enjoy writing, and because
    some of what I write might be useful - or simply enjoyable - to someone else.
    That's the whole business model. There isn't one.

    When that's the case, there's no reason to keep content behind a click.
    Sending you a teaser and asking you to visit my site would only make sense if I needed you *on my site* - for an impression, for a conversion, for something. I don't. So why would I make you leave your reader, your client, your comfortable corner of the internet, just to come to mine?

    What I want instead is simple: that you can read what I write the way you'd read a book on a cold winter evening, wrapped in a warm blanket. Privately.
    Quietly. On your own terms, in your own space, without anything tracking your eyes or nudging you toward something else.

    Your RSS reader is yours. Your Fediverse instance is yours. The content should be yours too.

    If you're on the Fediverse, you can follow both accounts directly:

    - my-notes → @mynotes

    - it-notes → @itnotes

    These are low-traffic accounts. If you don't want them to get lost in your timeline, feel free to hit the notification bell. I promise it won't make much noise.

    So from now on, it will be.

    @stefano followed, thanks!

    Just one problem, and it's not you: I can never remember how to get Mastodon to show me who I follow (I imagine that I should prune something …).

    Oops.

  • @stefano followed, thanks!

    Just one problem, and it's not you: I can never remember how to get Mastodon to show me who I follow (I imagine that I should prune something …).

    Oops.

    @grahamperrin I'm using lists - or "the bell" - to try to keep up with the timeline.

  • Your reader, your couch, your rules.

    Starting today, both my-notes.dragas.net and it-notes.dragas.net are changing the way they distribute content - on RSS and on the Fediverse alike.

    No more excerpts. No more "read more" links. Full posts, delivered directly to you, wherever you choose to read them.

    Here's why:
    I don't run ads. I don't have paywalls. I don't sell attention, or measure success in page views. I never have, and I have no intention of starting. My blogs exist because I enjoy writing, and because
    some of what I write might be useful - or simply enjoyable - to someone else.
    That's the whole business model. There isn't one.

    When that's the case, there's no reason to keep content behind a click.
    Sending you a teaser and asking you to visit my site would only make sense if I needed you *on my site* - for an impression, for a conversion, for something. I don't. So why would I make you leave your reader, your client, your comfortable corner of the internet, just to come to mine?

    What I want instead is simple: that you can read what I write the way you'd read a book on a cold winter evening, wrapped in a warm blanket. Privately.
    Quietly. On your own terms, in your own space, without anything tracking your eyes or nudging you toward something else.

    Your RSS reader is yours. Your Fediverse instance is yours. The content should be yours too.

    If you're on the Fediverse, you can follow both accounts directly:

    - my-notes → @mynotes

    - it-notes → @itnotes

    These are low-traffic accounts. If you don't want them to get lost in your timeline, feel free to hit the notification bell. I promise it won't make much noise.

    So from now on, it will be.

    @stefano @fediverso @mynotes @itnotes Interesting point of view. Give readers the opportunity to use their own tools. Rss, even text to speech apps which read feeds aloud, etc.

    I'm considering to adopt same method in my own space, but I have a doubt: what about the setup? I mean: the site talks about a fictional context, and if you haven't read the "about" page, you may misunderstand if reading just the last chapter because you followed the instance when I published chapter 10. So, how to guarantee readers to understand everything, whenever they start reading?
    We must get used to a public who goes to sites less and less. How to create an effective "about" / bio space?

  • @stefano @fediverso @mynotes @itnotes Interesting point of view. Give readers the opportunity to use their own tools. Rss, even text to speech apps which read feeds aloud, etc.

    I'm considering to adopt same method in my own space, but I have a doubt: what about the setup? I mean: the site talks about a fictional context, and if you haven't read the "about" page, you may misunderstand if reading just the last chapter because you followed the instance when I published chapter 10. So, how to guarantee readers to understand everything, whenever they start reading?
    We must get used to a public who goes to sites less and less. How to create an effective "about" / bio space?

    @elettrona @fediverso @mynotes @itnotes Interesting. I haven't considered this as I'm mainly writing (at least for now) separate contents (that can live inside a single post).
    I'll try to think about it.


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    Ever wonder why you see the #fedi22 hashtag in bios?Yeah, that's my fault. I built a People Directory in 2022 for the #fediverse that used that hashtag for verification.I'll improve it and make it way better, perhaps with Starter Pack support 😉https://fediverse.info/explore/people