discovery

 Discovery  is a variety of methods for finding content, websites, communities, or people to follow on the web including search, directories, recommendation engines, tags, or other serendipitous methods.

For developers: if you’re looking for discovery algorithms, see:
 * discovery-algorithms

This Wiki

 * chat-names

Indie Map

 * indie map

Microblog Discover

 * Micro.blog offers a few interesting (mostly hand-curated) methods of discovery:
 * Discover timeline
 * Emoji in Discover Using emoji (aka tagmoji) to collect related content for discovery purposes.
 * Curating the Micro.blog Discover Timeline
 * Where Discover Doesn't Help
 * MicroMonday was launched on 2018-01-08 as a means of helping people on the service discover interesting people to follow
 * MicroMonday Podcast is a microcast geared toward short introductions of community members by way of interviews.

IndieWeb XYZ directory

 * Indieweb.xyz is a Webmention-based directory that provides the ability to aggregate content based on a variety of stubs or tags.

webrings

 * 🕸💍 is a webring of IndieWeb community members. A list of members can be seen on the /directory page.
 * Microcast.club is a webring-based directory of microcasts, or short-form podcasts, created to help you discover new and interesting microcasts!
 * see also webring for more examples

The Feed Directory

 * The Feed Directory on Pine.blog. Add your site to their directory

Search My Site

 * Search My Site - provides for browsing and searching independent websites.

IndieWeb Search

 * IndieWeb Search is a search engine that lets you find websites and web pages made by IndieWeb community members. IndieWeb Search supports featured snippets and rich results for some queries.

IndieForums

 * IndieForums is a forum that provides the ability to aggregate posts and replies into threads for easier discovery. All posts on IndieForums are POSSE copies that are generated with u-syndication and Webmention.

Crawlers

 * RSS Discovery Engine crawls an RSS feed surfacing links to other sites that also have RSS feeds.

Curated Lists for Discovery
"I followed several new to me feeds today and then decided—why not share? There may be no other way to rediscover the social network that is blogging." "Finding new blogs is a big problem so, if you like this blog you may also appreciate the following people who have all interacted with the site via webmentions"
 * Kicks Condor has a hand-curated list of interesting websites that he updates (roughly) monthly on his site at https://www.kickscondor.com/hrefhunt/.
 * Warren Ellis published a list of recommended sites to follow via RSS on 2019-10-14 Blog Diet: A Starter List For Your RSS Reader
 * Jeremy Felt published Five RSS Feeds I Followed Today on 2019-11-21 indicating:
 * has a following page of people he's subscribed to (including names, avatars, and short descriptions)
 * Colin Walker has a directory on his site of all the people who have Webmentioned his content (including an OPML file)
 * Additional details here: https://colinwalker.blog/improving-the-webmentions-directory/
 * see also blogroll

Open Mentions
Open Mentions is a Webmention-based syndication service that provides the ability to aggregate content by topic.

Silo Examples

 * Nuzzel


 * Pocket - best of feature


 * WordPress.com/discover - A daily selection of the best content published on WordPress, collected for you by humans who love to read.


 * https://belong.io - a website by Andy Baio that surfaces relevant links from his Twitter community


 * Twitter has a widely used #FollowFriday or #FF hashtag that people use to Tweet about friends, colleagues, and others that they find interesting to follow, generally with a short statement about why.


 * Serendeputy is a small, independently run discovery service similar to Nuzzel. It describes itself as "a personal newsfeed engine. It reads the open web and then organizes and scores it for you. It learns what you like and helps you find something interesting to read.But, here’s what’s different. Unlike your favorite search engines and social networks, Serendeputy is entirely transparent, putting you in control." Paid accounts are available to help support the developer.


 * Feedly provides an AI named Leo for aiding in filtering and discovering content in one's feed. While not completely granular, the system allows modifying inputs to improve finding content without some of the issues that may come with only having access to an algorithmic feed


 * Inoreader began providing a sort by magic and popularity indicators in their feed reader in early 2020.


 * Podchaser is a podcast discovery and bookmark-like service


 * Ampie is a discovery tool with bookmark functionality that one can connect to their Twitter account. When visiting a page, the browser extension will add a small tab to the bottom of the screen indicating how many others have either bookmarked ("amplified") on the service or shared the link on Twitter or Hacker News. The footer tab will also indicate the number of potentially interesting pages on the same domain. On pages that have been shared within your networks, links on pages visited with the extension enabled will be given a "footnote" marker with the & character. For more details see https://ampie.app/hello.




 * Lobsters is an open source, technology-focused link-aggregation service similar to Hacker News. Users can both post to it as well as discover interesting topic-specific content from others. Comments on the service will send Webmentions to the original link if syndicated from a personal website.


 * Lemmy is an ActivityPub-based link-aggregation service similar to Hacker News with a number of different topic based communities.


 * Bear is a minimalist blogging platform. A /discover page highlights recommended posts of bloggers on the site.


 * Guppe Groups a group of bot accounts that can be used to aggregate social groups within the fediverse around a variety of topics like crafts, books, history, philosophy, etc.

Discovery UI

 * 2019-06-29 Social Reading User Interface for Discovery

Questions to consider
Questions to consider to help understand the broad space of what do people mean by "discovery" from a user feature perspective:
 * How do I discover "interesting [to me]" content to read, listen to, watch?
 * How do I publish my content so folks interested in it can more easily discover it?
 * How can I help this content (or person) I found be more easily discoverable for others who may be interested in it (them) as well?

Articles and Related Links

 * A silo example (Substack) describing ways to find other writers and examples on their platform and in their RSS reader
 * A silo example (Substack) describing ways to find other writers and examples on their platform and in their RSS reader
 * A silo example (Substack) describing ways to find other writers and examples on their platform and in their RSS reader
 * A silo example (Substack) describing ways to find other writers and examples on their platform and in their RSS reader

IndieWebCamp Related Sessions

 * Indie algorithm / Indiefilter was a session at IndieWeb Summit 2018
 * Discovery on the indieweb was a session at IndieWebCamp Utrecht 2019