I’m looking for recommendations for app based/nice mobile friendly sites (free ideally, but I’d consider subscription) that can help me keep across news in the tech/UX/design space.

I’m somewhat reliant on my LinkedIn (which is such a toilet and usually just ends up annoying me) for news/emerging issues etc that affect my industry - the main reason being I can scroll through and open things of interest.

I’ve subscribed to newsletters/bookmarked sites but I just never seem to get round to reading them. Countless emails just stack up sitting unread.

My theory is if it’s something I can just look through on my phone when I’d otherwise be doomscrolling, that I’ll be more likely to read things.

My work is in the content strategy/design space and I’m in Australia - so bonus points if it has relevance to me in that way. Thanks all!

Edit to add - I used to use Twitter too, but you know… Just no.

    • @boogetyboo@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      Great idea!

      At first I was bemoaning the lack of content here, but honestly if I’d posted this on Reddit, either it would get lost in the noise, or there’d be 50 comments taking the piss/laced with gatekeeping and sarcasm.

      Everyone’s being really helpful. I’m genuinely chuffed.

    • /home/pineapplelover
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      18 months ago

      Thanks for reminding me to regularly upload. I’ve recently only been making posts that I have questions or something and not updates.

  • @Yeah2206@infosec.pub
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    81 year ago

    For on-line RSS reader, try https://www.inoreader.com . I love it. You can search for feeds right on the site, or can go to a specific site to look for a feed sign. For example, Lemmy has a feed URL right next the question mark on top, so you can read your Lemmy’s subscriptions as a feed as well.

    • @boogetyboo@aussie.zone
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      11 year ago

      I haven’t but a cursory look tells me it’s all bit too ‘back end’ for my comprehension! I’ll keep having a look through though - thanks for the recommendation 😃

    • @boogetyboo@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      I’m not really, which I guess is the problem. LinkedIn is handy to follow people in my industry (particularly locally) as they will post things of relevance. But I kinda have to sort through all the wank, and ‘here’s my totally original take on what chatgpt means for us - in 23 slides of empty bullshit’. Twitter was good to a degree, but it’s such a negative space and many people I followed left as things started to go bad.

      I think the medium in which I consume this information is the key thing for me - I’m happy to read long articles and opinion pieces, but I need something I can easily scroll through on my phone.

      Memes are fun and all but I’m pretty sure my brain is atrophying.

      • @UprisingVoltage@feddit.it
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        21 year ago

        Yeah, I don’t really know if LinkedIn can be saved. Being a “work instagram” the real content is really hard to find, and I’d rather scroll through stuff I’m interested in anyways than people who boast about how much incredibillion dollars they made using chatGPT.

  • @mobiuscoffee@lemmy.ml
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    21 year ago

    There is a cute formulaic way active LinkedIn users frame every post.

    Let me tell you about my motivational story. I overcame extreme difficties in order to achieve more for my career in two short weeks using the Bernard Technique…

    Five paragraphs of heart wrenching guilt for the benefit of the company later and you’re being sold a premium course to find similar fulfillment from your life and job!