{
	"version": "https://jsonfeed.org/version/1",
	"title": "IntroZone",
	"icon": "https://avatars.micro.blog/avatars/2026/14/1897972.jpg",
	"home_page_url": "https://steveintro.micro.blog/",
	"feed_url": "https://steveintro.micro.blog/feed.json",
	"items": [
			{
				"id": "http://steveintro.micro.blog/2026/04/06/143336.html",
				"title": "I Only Read, I Don't Watch",
				"content_html": "<p>I find myself in a weird place with the internet. I used to love Twitter, getting my news from there and engaging with friends and some randos about various topics. I don&rsquo;t want to get into the politics or history of it, but it&rsquo;s pretty clear it&rsquo;s way different now, users are fragmented, and the notion of the &ldquo;creator economy&rdquo; has taken over not only X but every other platform.</p>\n<p>I have nothing against creators. I went to art school, I work in advertising producing creative content (well, now I consult but that&rsquo;s for another day). Make your money, get your brand deals, be &ldquo;creative&rdquo;. I just don&rsquo;t find the content enjoyable to consume, and the discovery and served-to-me aspect of it is equally annoying. And then there&rsquo;s AI slop, content generated at scale designed to game algorithms rather than say anything, which has made the signal-to-noise ratio genuinely bad in a way that feels new.</p>\n<p>Thinking about it, I never really liked watching videos online to begin with. Polished YouTube, TikTok, Reels, all of it. Watching requires either isolation or divided attention, and I don&rsquo;t have much of either. I prefer to read. That&rsquo;s probably why I liked Twitter in the first place: it was text, it was my own timeline of people I chose, not random things being served to me.</p>\n<p>This has manifested in a return to RSS and reading blogs, along with podcasts. A curated experience that isn&rsquo;t fed to me by an algorithm and keeps the copycat optimized content at arm&rsquo;s length. What you lose is any social or community aspect, which I&rsquo;m not necessarily craving but do find some value in. Nothing has really filled that gap cleanly.</p>\n<p>The hosts on a few podcasts I listen to have talked about this and have gone back to or started blogs for what I think are similar reasons. It inspired me to do the same. Have a place that is mine, where I can explore thoughts about my interests and where I&rsquo;m currently at, that I own and is free from the algorithmic content farms these platforms have become. And if that leads to some interaction with various communities, great. But that&rsquo;s a bonus, not a feature.</p>\n",
				
				"date_published": "2026-04-06T14:33:36-04:00",
				"url": "https://steveintro.micro.blog/2026/04/06/143336.html",
				"tags": ["Pontification "]
			},
			{
				"id": "http://steveintro.micro.blog/2026/04/06/this-is-a-great-example.html",
				
				"content_html": "<p>This is a great example of generative AI augmenting and supplementing traditional workflows, not completely replacing them.</p>\n\n<div style=\"position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.25%; height: 0; overflow: hidden;\">\n  <iframe src=\"https://www.youtube.com/embed/a5iD_InQYWA\" style=\"position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%; border:0;\" allowfullscreen title=\"YouTube Video\"></iframe>\n</div>\n\n",
				
				"date_published": "2026-04-06T10:48:23-04:00",
				"url": "https://steveintro.micro.blog/2026/04/06/this-is-a-great-example.html",
				"tags": ["AI"]
			}
	]
}
