@kev @joel I'm with Joel on this.
One I frequently visit is @penaddict ' s https://www.penaddict.com
@kev So...the early days of the web where everyone copied that one spinning email GIF?
@kev have you tried typing the konami code on mine? ;-)
https://evilham.com/
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Konami_Code
@kev Ditto! Happens to me all the time when I see a blog with different post types, RSS feeds for each, and where they have everything in one place.
Me on the other hand I have always scattered my content in subdomains and different blogs (coding, regular life blogging, podcasts, etc...) 🙈
@kev I’m curious to know what mine is lmao https://cropp.blog
I make simplicity look complicated
@kev This happened to me today as well! Now wanting to add 'Link Blogs' like Simon Willison: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38928564
@kev I really like it. I don’t do a lot in Raindrop, but it’s an excellent “drop any sort of link here so you can find it again” service. It’s like long term storage for my links. There’s so much more you can do, like those public webpages and RSS feeds for each folder that I’ve barely dipped into.
They bucked the trend and instead of going more web-appy, their iOS app recently went from all web views to a really good native version. Great safari extension, cross-platform, it’s great.
The paid version ~$25/year saves an archive of each link you save, so you have the page if it ever goes offline.
In short, 👍.
@jarrod I love Raindrop. With the extension installed searching for links in the address bar is as easy as typing rd<tab> and then a keyword or two. It’s faster than #Raycast