Lots of technical papers. Pre print servers such as Bioarxiv and PeerJ are great. As are traditional journals such as Nature, Cell and Science Advances. And MIT Tech Review, Quanta Mag, NYT Science, etc for longform pieces.
The future of this sort of "feed" may lie in short form, digestible video bites. Which can be distributed via compact html5 video. Bloomberg's TicToc is a good example of this for financial and business news. In 5 minutes, you should be able to get caught up on all the stories of the day.
And there is certainly an opportunity to generate video summaries via machine learning ;)
I read HN exclusively. Sometime the gist is in comments and sometimes I check the submission. I research anything of interest and new stuff I have a no clue about.
Edit)
PS:
Unfortunately I have no one to share anything I find.
0 peers nor friends
Recently I set up a python script as an RSS feed for the sites I like:
The Outline: real good journalism for the 21st century
The Verge: good for tech updates, but kind of click baity. I have a love/hate relationship with it.
Polygon: sister site of Verge about video games, but it doesn’t take itself too seriously, so I like it more.
Scientific American: makes scientific papers (mostly about philosophy and the mind) really accessible. They seem to try too hard to be trendy though (eg: recent articles on BTC).
Hacker News: less for actual news and more for well articulated opinions on the news. Favorite site to visit after an Apple keynote.
If this is real good journalism I guess it's time to just move to a cabin in the woods and call it quits for society.
The one thing I want is an outlet that knows to shut up if they don't have anything interesting to say. Having a class of people attempt to do this as a daily job seems pointless in this day and age.
I have recently stopped reading any kind of news. As a result I find that my mind is lot less cluttered. I have realized that once you give it up, you don't really miss it a lot.
I built a collection of feeds over the last few years, originally using Feedly; Nowadays I access my collection of RSS using Reeder on my Mac and my iPhone (because of the sync between devices - but any similar client would do).
The feeds are grouped by category, for instance:
- Journals (various machine learning stuff)
- Music (MetalSucks, etc.)
- Politics (mostly think tanks and political publications)
- Tech (Verge, Ars, Wired, HN, The Register...)
- Web dev (Smashing mag, Google, Mozilla...)
- Local News (Norwegian news)
Other categories include world news, privacy, NGOs, infosec, games, economics, popsci, compsci, etc.
I'm sorry, but I don't know how I'd make it available for others; It's not a feed, but just basically just a bunch of RSS feeds that I've categorized into my reader's equivalent of folders.
Lots and lots of art and comic strips through RSS (inherited from Google Reader <sadface.jpg> and read through Newsblur) and instagram, a few google alerts that are more often false-positives (which is fine, my search terms can't be any more precise), some IFTT recipes pulling from HN and twitter, personal blogs from authors I like.
The future of this sort of "feed" may lie in short form, digestible video bites. Which can be distributed via compact html5 video. Bloomberg's TicToc is a good example of this for financial and business news. In 5 minutes, you should be able to get caught up on all the stories of the day.
And there is certainly an opportunity to generate video summaries via machine learning ;)
https://twitter.com/tictoc