792 points by trueduke 5 days ago | 211 comments | View on ycombinator
hamdingers 4 days ago |
freetonik 4 days ago |
The criteria is simple: human-written (as much as I can validate myself), in English (for now), with valid RSS feed, and not a micro-blog (so, more than just feed of links or short tweet-like messages).
Similar to Kagi's Small Web viewer, or StumbleUpon-style viewer: you can get a random listing of blogs [1] or a random listing of posts from all blogs [2]. Feeds and posts are indexed, so full-text search works across all blogs. When possible and permitted by robots.txt, text is scraped for searching, so even if some text is omitted in the RSS feed by the author, search should work.
Though I do plan to implement a similar "view one random post at source" kind of view, soon.
UPD: Feel free to submit a blog, including your own! [3]
[1] https://minifeed.net/blogs/by/random
modernerd 4 days ago |
https://github.com/kagisearch/smallweb/blob/main/smallweb.tx...
There is also Small Comic:
https://kagi.com/smallweb/?comic
https://github.com/kagisearch/smallweb/blob/main/smallcomic....
And Small YouTube:
https://github.com/kagisearch/smallweb/blob/main/smallyt.txt
yashasolutions 4 days ago |
Jokes aside, it's really nice and I can totally see becoming addictive. Kudos to Kagi team for an other user oriented product. (as a side note, I am using Kagi daily and i didn't know about this tool)
ArtificeAccount 4 days ago |
I remember when you could half-remember a comment from a website, type that into Google, and get taken to the article you were looking for. That was back in like 2010. To me that's the old, and useful, search engine that I want.
azangru 4 days ago |
arscan 4 days ago |
marcd35 4 days ago |
It refreshes every 5 hours and shows you the most recent blogs published on Kagi. Check it out!
erremerre 4 days ago |
Also somehow if they are clever, they could use this for those translation system they are using, but please let us select our own language without feeding automatic translation like youtube does).
barbazoo 4 days ago |
https://kagi.com/smallweb/?url=https://pliutau.com/reading-l...
> This page is auto-generated from Github Actions workflow that runs every day at night and fetches the 5 latest articles from each of my favorite blogs.
sam_goody 4 days ago |
You can choose similar sites by index.
But what are the criterion to have your site listed here, or how it will prevent this from just becoming a massive gamified advertising index, or anything more about "why these?" is not obvious to me.
Can anyone explain what is special about these sites specifically, or where this project is going?
input_sh 4 days ago |
7777777phil 4 days ago |
Aachen 4 days ago |
For me it says I'm blocked due to hitting a "secondary" rate limit (don't understand what that means). I don't think I've opened a page on github yet today so clearly it's a lie. Is it the referer that triggers this?
In general, freeloading the "small web" on a Microsoft service is kind of ironic. Being blocked by algorithms that try to detect if you're really human is precisely one of the things one would hope to get away from by using small, personal websites
HelloUsername 4 days ago |
Previous post 7-sept-2023 https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37420281 185 comments. And https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39476015 23-feb-2023 36 comments
emehex 4 days ago |
susam 4 days ago |
If you like it and if you have a website, please join the network. It only takes uploading two files to your web server to set it up. In fact, you can host it on GitHub Pages or Codeberg Pages too. And you can link to any small website (not just blogs).
Details about how it works and how to set it up available here: https://codeberg.org/susam/wander#readme
the_axiom 4 days ago |
unbindableisaac 4 days ago |
Perhaps I'm yelling into the void here, but what would be great is when first landing at kagi.com/smallweb, the url query parameter would be somehow set, as it is when "Next Post" is clicked.
myth_drannon 4 days ago |
Venn1 4 days ago |
Curious what goes on behind the Next Post and Show Similar buttons.
ThomIves 3 days ago |
rusakov-field 4 days ago |
drstewart 4 days ago |
hitekker 4 days ago |
Whimsical detours like this feels like they’re operating aa early Google minus the killer product.
bubblerme 4 days ago |
The small web is where genuine expertise lives. When I'm looking for a real opinion on a tool or a deep technical explanation, I almost never find it on the first page of Google anymore. It's all SEO-optimized content farm articles or AI-generated summaries. The actual expert wrote a blog post that's sitting on page 5.
The challenge is curation at scale. Manually identifying quality small web content works when the corpus is small, but maintaining quality as it grows requires either very good automated signals or a community-driven approach. Curious how Kagi balances this.
jwelten 4 days ago |
lich_king 4 days ago |
I don't think it's Kagi's fault, but I guess it's depressing in a way. A lot of "small web" bloggers dream of being a part of the "big web", and when they get a cheat button, they have no second thoughts about mashing it.
titzer 4 days ago |
The worst case scenario is that AI runs everything, we have no skills, and are completely dependent on it...and it shows us crummy commercials and subtly steers us to paid placement with no recourse whatsoever. I hate this possible future, but this is where the money will lead.
starkparker 4 days ago |
papakatsu 4 days ago |
__erik 4 days ago |
undefined 5 days ago |
lelanthran 4 days ago |
:-)
myth_drannon 4 days ago |
Quite possible that people will come up with a solution eventually. Like Samizdat was a solution to censorship and a broken publishing system in USSR.
apples_oranges 4 days ago |
undefined 4 days ago |
MetroWind 3 days ago |
But I did eventually stumble upon a post about two corgis, and another about medieval Europe...thingy. So it's not all bad.
sointeresting 4 days ago |
undefined 4 days ago |
leontloveless 4 days ago |
devcraft_ai 4 days ago |
wei03288 4 days ago |
WhereIsTheTruth 4 days ago |
To me the small web is any little website that was created to be interesting rather than to sell me something. That includes stuff like neocities, "shrine" type sites, single purpose sites, fandom portals, web experiments, etc.
Unfortunately Kagi's definition of "small web" is: blog or webcomic. You must have an RSS feed and it must have recent posts. That rules out so much interesting stuff I don't understand the point.