Skip to content

A new way to follow posts on Alexroddie.com

Alex Roddie
Alex Roddie
1 min read

Many of my readers also follow me on Twitter, where I post notifications of new articles on this website. For about six months this process has been automated, which helps me when I have to manage things from my phone, but I’ve noticed that new article tweets tend to get buried in all the other stuff happening on Twitter. I’m trying to find ways of making it easier to follow new material on this website.

So I decided to adopt a solution I’ve seen other bloggers use with great success. I’ve established a second, completely automatic account, whose sole function is to auto-tweet new articles published on this website. Think of it as RSS for Twitter, or a list of bookmarks.

If this sounds like it could be useful for you, follow @alexroddie_feed.

I will continue to post new article tweets on my regular account, before you ask – but for people who mainly follow me just to get notifications of new posts, this should make things a lot easier!

Notes

Alex Roddie

Happiest on a mountain. Writer, story-wrangler, digital and film photographer. Editor of Sidetracked magazine (I make the words come out good).

Comments


Related Posts

Members Public

Perthshire, March, Kodak cine film

I've just finished a batch of scanning, so thought I'd pop up a photo post to follow up from this entry a couple of weeks back. In that post I spoke a bit about my approach to photo note-taking. I also shared some iPhone pictures. Today

Perthshire, March, Kodak cine film
Members Public

Something I should have done years ago: ALCS (plus nebulous thoughts about writing as a lifelong vocation)

After years of telling myself 'I should really register for ALCS this year', I've finally managed to motivate myself to do it before the deadline (just). It's been an interesting exercise to see everything I've published since 2021 all in one place.

Something I should have done years ago: ALCS (plus nebulous thoughts about writing as a lifelong vocation)
Members Public

What survives in the record: a Glen Coe hill day from 15 years ago today

Every now and again, I dip into my Lightroom library and journals, curious to see what I was doing 10, 15, or 20 years ago on this day. On the 6th of April, 2009, my brother James had just arrived in Glen Coe and was keen to experience these mountains

What survives in the record: a Glen Coe hill day from 15 years ago today

Mastodon