piannaf’s avatarpiannaf’s Twitter Archive—№ 1,952

  1. Thank you to the people who write the blogs I read. I was reminded how important you are to me when I answered a question earlier today dev.to/piannaf/comment/ijh0 Luckily you are all on twitter, too, so I can mention you as thanks and recommend others follow your blogs.
    1. …in reply to @piannaf
      1. …in reply to @piannaf
        @inowland @cap @keavy @borland @brwngrldev @mpoppendieck @fulhack @SonOfGarr @kellan @catehstn @HeyChelseaTroy @markmcerqueira @MWermuth @lara_hogan @attackgecko @johannarothman @hakanforss @davenicolette @romanpichler @stepchowfun @fabynou @skamille Just subscribed to @rynchantress's blog after reading linked post from @kstewart/1218319675404292097?s=09 Looked at headlines of previous posts and this is one I'll start from the beginning, catch up to current, then have RSS keep me updated.
        1. …in reply to @piannaf
          Just subscribed to @amontalenti's blog. Really good mix of topics for my interests. @amontalenti/1281980887844913153
          1. …in reply to @piannaf
            Just subscribed to @handsrm's blog. rachelhands.com/2020/07/21/handling-difficult-conversations/ was a great read. I scrolled through some past posts and see I will learn a lot from her
      2. …in reply to @piannaf
        By following personal blogs, you essentially curate your own publication. I have tried following publications before, but there too much stuff that's irrelevant or duplicated. Reading a headline takes time, feeling like your wasting your time is bad for mental health.
        1. …in reply to @piannaf
          Whenever I come across a new blog (and yes, please let me know which ones you recommend), I read through the latest 5 posts. If it seems like I'd want to get updates with every new post, I subscribe. Often, I'll read through the entire history as well. Good writing doesn't age.
          1. …in reply to @piannaf
            And it may look like I must spend a lot of time reading these blogs (that's a lot of people). But they are real people with time constraints like me, and they aren't paid by how many posts they write. So I spend less time reading blogs than I do commuting.
            1. …in reply to @piannaf
              Much less, actually. Twitter is the content that takes most of my "reading" time. I have also highly curated my twitter feed and get through everything every day (that's getting harder these days so it's about time to reorganize). Anyway, thanks again, and keep writing!
      3. …in reply to @piannaf