this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2023
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That's what I used twitter for tbh. Since everyone is on it it's easy to follow people, get instant updates and maybe even discover something new through the people you follow and their likes. It's really a shame it went to shit, it was the lurkers perfect tool, especially when it comes to artists or content creators.
Not everyone is on twitter, but lots (all?) of Content Management Systems and blogs have a RSS feed.
As an academic, I'm syndicated to several labs and research groups which have their own websites, but don't care about being visible on Twitter.
do birds fly? do ducks duck?
There are not as many as before, but not as few as you might think. A lot of them are hidden these days (you have to inspect the page source), but they are still there.
Readers like feedly are able to find them if you just provide the URL to the website.
I'm not talking about CMS or blogs though, I mean individuals that are active on twitter. Redigit, the developer of Terraria doesn't have an RSS feed but is active on twitter. Valheim devs often post sneak peaks of upcoming updates on their personal twitter accounts. Rebecca, creative director of warframe is active on twitter. Lots of twitch streamers or youtubers don't have separate blog posts or sites, they just post on twitter about upcoming streams, videos or events. Webcomics and artists might have their own sites but generally its easier to discover new ones on twitter where they also often retweet other similar artists.
It's probably different for academia and businesses but for me, a completely casual user that doesn't contribute to twitter and instead just has a highly curated feed of things he likes, twitter was perfect before they started filling the feed with random crap I'm not even following. It doesn't seem to me like RSS is a replacement for that.