With the fall of Twitter and the fragmentation of where everyone has ended up I'm finding that I'm discovering less and less views/posts/articles that are out of my comfort zone.<p>I find without the stream of people I had curated for years to be pretty diverse in interest subject matter I tend to just frequent the same haunts every day.<p>What do you do to discover new things or stay on top of what's going on?<p>Disclaimer: I've been able to follow a few people to Mastodon but it seems some interest feeds have just dropped dead.
<a href="https://www.producthunt.com/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.producthunt.com/</a> (For new SaaS products and interesting books)<p><a href="https://sumi.news/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://sumi.news/</a> (One quick sweep of current events)<p><a href="https://pinboard.in/popular" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://pinboard.in/popular</a> (Everything that is trending on the web)<p>And of course, Hackernews (I regularly browse /newest when I am feeling serendipitous).
I like the Google News that appear on Android when I swipe left from the main screen.
It shows you articles related to what you searched recently.
Sometimes it came up with things "I didn't know that I wanted to know".
I googled a problem from an angle and few days in the Google News on Android few articles related to that problem appeared.<p>It's also very nice that you can only scroll through only 2 screens of news than you have to wait.<p>This to avoid the infinite scroll of the Facebook Newsfeed where you keep scrolling for too long and the news get less and less relevant and then you have the feeling of vomiting like when you eat too many candies at once.
For programming languages I use some curated weekly newsletters:<p>Javascript
<a href="https://javascriptweekly.com/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://javascriptweekly.com/</a><p>React
<a href="https://react.statuscode.com/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://react.statuscode.com/</a><p>There are curated weekly newsletters on many languages/big frameworks.
You may like this small site I made for browsing tiny tech blogs:<p><a href="https://blogs.hn" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://blogs.hn</a>