Some thoughts on saving links

Seeing Andy Bell and Sophie Koonin’s posts about their link post setups made me think I’ve been doing links wrong for a while now. I actually have two post types for sharing links that I often use interchangeably, “posts” and “links”.

So, I decided to consolidate the two and start using links in the more traditional sense to, you know, link to things.

Some changes to my link workflow:

  • On my site, the title of the link post already goes to the external link of the post itself, not to a post page on my site. More on that in a sec.
  • I already had a custom bookmarklet that let me capture the title, link, and a highlight from a page but I’ve added the ability to post right from the pop-up, not just make a draft.
  • I added some custom filters to Jan Boddez’s Share on Mastodon plugin that formats links differently than posts or notes when shared to Mastodon. In the case of links:
    • They get a #Link hashtag appended to them.
    • The URL that gets shared to Mastodon is the original link to the post, the external one I mentioned above, not one to my own website. That always felt confusing and added complexity to the whole experience.
  • I’ve added a top level menu item on my site that will let people quickly browse the links I’ve shared.

I’m much happier with this. You can already see the results of this in the post I shared by Matt Birchler about how he built his new membership program in Ghost. Here’s the Mastodon post.

I’ve rethought this approach quite a bit. I’m not sure sharing to Mastodon was the best thing to do but I have built a dedicated bookmarks page for everything I save/share.

The return of personal blogging

Monique Judge for The Verge:

Watching the demise of Twitter under the helm of Elon Musk has made me nostalgic for the personal blogging days. The decline of Twitter with the current erosion of legacy media has left me thinking we need to bring personal blogging back with a vengeance. […] The biggest reason personal blogs need to make a comeback is a simple one: we should all be in control of our own platforms.

Overall, a great article with tons of motivation for people out there who have never had a personal blog or abandoned one long ago to either get started or get back into it.

As an aside, one of my biggest pet peeves is when people say something needs to return or be “brought back” simply because they weren’t doing it. In this case, blogs don’t need to make a comeback, they never left. You need to come back to blogging and, conveniently, it’s never been easier to do that.