Wasn’t sure where to ask this but figured people here host their own rss platforms. I just started with miniflux. Between that and reeder it makes RSS nice and easy.
My issue is that until the 3rd party Reddit nonsense, i let Reddit monopolize my information gathering. To the point I don’t know where else to get info from. Like which websites I can trust that aren’t just bad forms of marketing. Forums and things like that. I don’t know any of them because I spent all my time with Reddit.
Anyone have ideas or suggestions of good rss feeds for people who are interested in tech and programming and gaming and whatnot
Edit: thanks for all the great suggestions. I’m building up a nice RSS stream.
It does I think, not as much as it used to but every now and then I find good articles on there I wouldn't have found elsewhere. For me, it's worth a quick glance.
It depends what your interests are. I have 364 feeds in my reader (granted, a lot of these are from Reddit [1], I wouldn't be surprised if they remove this way to consume posts someday...), on various topics ranging from IT/tech stuff, news, DIY, history/art blogs, youtube channels [2], bandcamp album releases [3]...
When I find an interesting article by just randomly browsing/following links, I often check if the website/blog has an RSS feed and just add it to my feed reader. If it's too noisy, I end up adding filters to discard (or auto-mark as read) bad articles based on title/content/tags.
While it's not articles, you probably want to follow your favorite projects using Github and Gitlab's RSS feeds for repositories, especially the releases feed. I often learn more about actual trends (not just things people talk about but do not implement) by reading releases changelogs than by reading medium or press articles.
Otherwise, Hacker News (mentioned by temp_user) and Lobster (rss) both are good ways to follow news. HN is more verbose. Lobsters filters what they think is the best content from HN, but it usually comes a day or two later. One interesting aspect of those aggregators is that they help you discover websites that may contain their own rss feed.
You're going to have a pleasant surprise, then. :) There are RSS feeds for basically everything, on Github : a repository commits, an issue/pull request activities, a user activities, your social feed (the homepage), project releases, etc. Same for Gitlab. Gitlab even recently added a RSS feed for topics, allowing to get notifications when a project matching given topic is created (example: the feed for 3d printing projects). Too bad they don't have as much activity than Github.