@joejenett I enjoy your links. I wish there was a search engine just for blogs (maybe there is one?) but without that, human curation and sharing is the best way to discover interesting, independent thoughts.
@canion Back in the day there was Technorati, and Google had the specialized blog search engine blogs.google.com (not to be confused with Blogger or Blogspot.com).
@canion IceRocket was quite good for a time. Daypop was another one I found useful. Bloglines was a reader/aggregator but also had a good search feature that made it useful for discovery.
@bradenslen Bloglines! I used that for ages until Google Reader lured me away. Wow, I’m old.
@canion Having been doing the daily pointers thing since 2000, through times when they’re were several search engines just for blogs, I’ve always felt human curation is what makes the big difference in providing something of value for like-minded web surfers. I like to think I spend the time sifting through noise (whether it comes from search results, RSS feeds, Pinboard, or any other source) so you don’t have to (unless of course, your tastes and preferences are different than mine). If you’re looking for any or all those other types of sites I mentioned in why i link, search engines are fine and you are your own curator. I do what I do for the relatively small number of people out there who share my tastes and preferences. I never encountered a search engine that let you search for personal blogs free of annoyances like popups, promotional page overlays, and overtly commercial content (or tone). It takes human curation to sift those things out. It’s very subjective, I know.
@canion btw – I’m glad you enjoy the links. That’s always good to hear. 😊
@joejenett I enjoy your links. I wish there was a search engine just for blogs (maybe there is one?) but without that, human curation and sharing is the best way to discover interesting, independent thoughts.
@canion Back in the day there was Technorati, and Google had the specialized blog search engine
blogs.google.com
(not to be confused with Blogger or Blogspot.com).@amoroso @canion Oh, I’d forgotten all about Google’s blog search engine.
Some time ago, @brentsimmons wrote a couple of posts about blog search engines that started good conversations here. (A web search for “brent simmons” “blog search” reveals some other commentary around those posts.)
@smokey There used to be a raft of blog and RSS search engines, IceRocket comes to mind. All gone now.
@bradenslen I remember IceRocket!
@canion IceRocket was quite good for a time. Daypop was another one I found useful. Bloglines was a reader/aggregator but also had a good search feature that made it useful for discovery.
@bradenslen Bloglines! I used that for ages until Google Reader lured me away. Wow, I’m old.
@canion Having been doing the daily pointers thing since 2000, through times when they’re were several search engines just for blogs, I’ve always felt human curation is what makes the big difference in providing something of value for like-minded web surfers. I like to think I spend the time sifting through noise (whether it comes from search results, RSS feeds, Pinboard, or any other source) so you don’t have to (unless of course, your tastes and preferences are different than mine). If you’re looking for any or all those other types of sites I mentioned in why i link, search engines are fine and you are your own curator. I do what I do for the relatively small number of people out there who share my tastes and preferences. I never encountered a search engine that let you search for personal blogs free of annoyances like popups, promotional page overlays, and overtly commercial content (or tone). It takes human curation to sift those things out. It’s very subjective, I know.
@canion btw – I’m glad you enjoy the links. That’s always good to hear. 😊