diff --git a/content/journal/dispatch-25-march-2025/index.md b/content/journal/dispatch-25-march-2025/index.md index dbbe193..277af26 100644 --- a/content/journal/dispatch-25-march-2025/index.md +++ b/content/journal/dispatch-25-march-2025/index.md @@ -93,7 +93,7 @@ I mentioned last month that, in an attempt to gain more control over my attentio > I’ve corralled most of my media exposure into my feed reader, which helps because I must choose to open it, and have removed access from my phone. But while I generally feel RSS is a healthy way to follow writers, it’s still a feed. And feeds, whether self-curated or assembled by a corporate algorithm, are designed to be an efficient information delivery mechanism. Their function is to provide easy, immediate access to new information. -In order to keep up with the sites I like without exposing myself to an infinite content well, I set up [rss2email][9] on a schedule so that every morning at 5am, it checks the 20 or so sites I've added and emails me any new posts in a nice digest format. This way, I have a few interesting things to look at it in the morning, but no temptation to check it throughout the day -- my monkey brain knows there won't be anything new to distract myself with. +In order to keep up with the sites I like without exposing myself to an infinite content well, I set up [rss2email][9] on a schedule so that every morning at 5am, it checks the 20 or so sites I've added and emails me any new posts in a nice digest format. This way, I have a few interesting things to look at in the morning, but no temptation to check it throughout the day -- my monkey brain knows there won't be anything new to distract myself with. [9]: https://github.com/rss2email/rss2email