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Michele Neylon :: Pensieri

Michele Neylon :: Pensieri

Technology, Marketing, Domains, Thoughts

Which Technical Sites Do You Read?

July 19, 2009 by Michele Neylon 7 Comments

Image representing Engadget as depicted in Cru...

Image via CrunchBase

I’m always curious to know which sites people visit on a regular basis, so this morning I asked people on Twitter which sites they went to.

Engadget seems to be a very popular choice.

Other ones people mentioned included The Register, Silicon Republic (for the headlines), Gizmodo, Ars Technica, Wired and TUAW

So which ones do you read?

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Filed Under: Techie :: Techno :: Tagged With: Online Communities, Social network, twitter

Michele is founder and CEO of Irish hosting provider and domain name registrar Blacknight. Read More…

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jenn says

    July 19, 2009 at 1:17 pm

    None on the sites you mentioned.. Aside from facebook and friendster, I visit this free social media & Internet marketing guides, http://www.BramSelleslach.com
    Best regards,
    Jenn
    Internet Marketing Officer
    Free Social Media & Internet marketing guides:
    http://www.BramSelleslach.com

  2. Michele Neylon says

    July 19, 2009 at 1:25 pm

    So you visit a site you are involved with?

  3. Una Coleman says

    July 19, 2009 at 5:12 pm

    For various reasons I occassional log into the following tech blogs. One could do nothing else but read blogs (good, bad,funny and downright ugly)
    Anywhere here are a few of my recommendations:
    http://www.uphoffonmedia.com/uphoffonmediacom/2009/6/28/7-key-themes-on-the-state-of-tech-marketing-today.html
    http://www.insurancetech.com/policy-administration/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=216500073
    http://chrishornat.blogspot.com/2009/07/innovation-task-force-first-meeting.html
    http://brian.teeman.net/
    http://www.apeofsteel.com/
    Silicon Republic
    http://blogs.forrester.com/product_management/2008/01/bff-for-product.html
    http://blog.sciodev.com/
    http://blogs.gartner.com/ – pick the ones that are most relevant to your area of specialism/expertise I’m interested in technology in financial services.
    http://www.forrester.com/community as above

  4. John McCormac says

    July 19, 2009 at 7:34 pm

    I tend to have a rather eclectic reading pattern. Sometimes I visit TheRegister.co.uk and Siliconrepublic for tech news. However Siliconrepublic.com is just too shallow (recycled press releases) when it comes to deep tech stuff. Wired is interesting up to a point. Cnet’s http://www.news.com has good general coverage. Even the Irish Times Friday business technology section might have something interesting.
    It really depends on what I am working on at the time. So on any given day, that could move from database topics, computability issues, algorithms, HTML, CSS, PHP, SQL, cryptography, hardware and technology. With the crypto, it is generally the mailing lists and Bruce Schneier’s Crypto-Gram.
    The problem is that anyone who is in any way technologically competent reaches a level of knowledge that is way beyond the average technology journalist and as a result, their visits to ordinary tech news sites will begin to decrease as their vists to specialist tech sites increase.

  5. Richard Sexton says

    July 20, 2009 at 12:35 am

    /.

  6. Stewart Curry says

    July 20, 2009 at 9:34 am

    http://www.lifehacker.com is pretty good for productivity software and for stuff like office setups etc

  7. Paul M. Watson says

    July 20, 2009 at 1:05 pm

    I’ve stopped following aggregated blogs like Engadget, Gizmodo, TUAW, Wired, TechCrunch etc. They post too much and about too many things to be useful.
    Instead I follow a handful of individual bloggers. One of them will always pick-up on the big stories while offering stories that the aggregated sites tend to miss. Kottke, Daring Fireball, Simon Willison, Aidan Finn, Damien Mulley, Tom Raftery on Green Monk, Hivelogic, I Am Cal, Plasticbag, Dave Winer etc.
    Twitter has become a big source of news now though. Plenty from yourself, Pat Phelan, Top Gold, Eirepreneur etc.

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