> Engigogo Digest is a weekly newsletter full of interesting, relevant links, product suggestions, curated in spare time by @kantbtrue & @savydv.<p>Who are these people and why should I care about what they find interesting? What makes them stand out as a currators of interesting topics and articles that I would give you my email address and have you email me a newsletter ?<p>(Reading that back I don't intend it to be offensive or insulting, I just don't know how to express it better...) You want to collect peoples email addresses but I see nothing on that site that explains why I would find your newsletter interesting. OK, you have a section for developers and I'm a developer, so why should I subscribe?<p>Who are you?
The problem with these things is often they end up becoming irrelevant product pitches by startups and as someone who has something to advertise I find neither the business nor the readers really benefit. How do you intend to make the content relevant and high quality? That is the key to success with something like this I think.
If this newsletter interests you, you may also like [Changelog Weekly](<a href="https://changelog.com/weekly" rel="nofollow">https://changelog.com/weekly</a>).
Interestingly, email breaks this type of content for me.<p>Whenever I subscribe to any "digest" in email form it piles up and sits unread in my inbox (well, in a subfolder, but still clearly visible until I "mark as read" without reading it). Maybe sometimes it's because it's just too long and hardly anyone manages to post enough interesting links (for me, on a regular basis) that I find the time to click through them. I also don't really follow blogs that primarily post links anymore. TLDR: Complaining because I'm a weird person, I guess.<p>Quite the hypocrite, been doing this myself for years, with a readership that borders on a dozen :P ( <a href="http://f5n.org/stack/" rel="nofollow">http://f5n.org/stack/</a> ) but I've never sent out emails and don't plan to.