316 private links
Thoughts about writing and blogging. About the reader's time, writing audience, website performance, analytics, visitor respect, exclusion of third-party resources
We could consider the website "hospitality".
The best use for read-it-later tools for someone who relies primarily on feed subscriptions for reading is to perform the function that algorithms purport to perform for the majority. If you subscribe to interesting long-form articles, many of the articles that you read will have links. These links will either be to other pages on the article’s website or to articles from around the web discussed or cited to in the article.
In a post titled The Good Old Hyperlink, Kyle Labriola wrote “I like hyperlinks because it lets my personal writing feel like an evolving conversation.” Taking the point one step further, Matthias Ott wrote that the link is “the Web’s most fundamental building block, the thing that connects one human’s work to another’s.”
I also have something with hyperlinks. They are awesome to use, they feel great.