![]() Sarah Gilman’s Keeping Watch Over Seabirds at World’s Edge, published in Hakai magazine, the same except for being an Other Notables. Jane Hu’s story, New Wind Projects Power Local Budgets in Wyoming, published in High Country News, was selected for The Best American Science and Nature Writing of 2022. But without a true update, they would spend their golden years away from the front page of Google, away from us confused users who don’t really want to wade through a seven year old list of links that mostly don’t work. Lists could be updated, and renew their year-long timer. A place where we can go and see what we all thought was going to be the next Twitter, which weird dating apps we were recommending, and which grills were arbitrarily picked as “the best” by people who had never cooked anything on them. They should retire into some kind of archive, a museum of recommendations of sorts. And we don’t even have to delete them entirely - we should certainly save them for posterity. Let them live their lives, serve their time, help us all out, and then go quietly into the night. So here is my modest proposal: best of lists should self destruct after a year. So we’re all left to googling “best recipe saving app” when we need it. And they can be useful! Nobody can reasonably remember what all these apps and products are called. (Full disclosure, I have also reviewed products for the Wirecutter/Sweethome sites.) And app lists are easy to write, quick to publish, and they’re the kind of things people search for. I personally own at least 10 objects that I bought on the Wirecutter’s recommendation. Now, I am not saying we should ban best of lists. Here is an extremely scientific graph, demonstrating the problem: We are creating a great pacific garbage patch of best of lists - a region of the web that looks fine from the surface but is thick with tiny particles of information that have decomposed and are no longer useful but can still get stuck in our guts and cause all kinds of intestinal problems. So why does Google think that the most relevant best of list to serve me is from seven years ago? I am going to guess that since 2010, new and better products have entered the market. And even when the products of sites on offer haven’t disappeared, they’re probably not still the best options. So for every one new “best sleep tracking app” list, there seem to be three or four versions of it living on the web. Then there are all the sites that scrape and reproduce these best of lists. “Yeah I know,” she replied, “but I’m sure there are new ones out there you could cover.” I had to wonder if we should be even calling these “best of” lists at all, or rather just “here’s a list of apps that we could find information about online that did not previously appear on our other lists.” “We just did that a few months ago,” we said. Then a few months later, an editor came back asking for a piece on the best dating apps. This was funding our real work, we told ourselves. We played along, because we needed money - the best dating apps, the best. When I helped run a women’s writing collective, our partners were constantly asking for best of lists. Lifehacker isn’t alone here, they’re just one of a million sites who do this. The Five Best Password Managers, the Five Best Grills, the Five Best Smartphone Running Apps. Lifehacker has built a whole empire around best of lists. Tiny blips of pure sugar that can fuel a site from one sugar high to the next, capitalizing on schmucks like me who can’t remember what anything is called. Aside from The Wirecutter, whose staff constantly updates their picks and maintains their offerings, most of these best of lists are good to at most a year.įor the endlessly hungry maw of the internet, best of lists are like Smarties. I was looking for a site that would let me pull up Instagram images based on their geotags, three of those were dead. I wanted a way to search Twitter images - four of the five sites listed on my top result had defaulted on their hosting. Half of tools picked didn’t even exist anymore. The first result was an article from 2010. (A related complaint: companies that name themselves words like “medium” so that when you’re trying to figure out how to do something you cannot search “medium format image” when you’re trying to figure out how to format an image on Medium.) Anyway, I googled “distraction free writing system,” because as you can see I am easily distracted. But they all seemed to have simple, hard to remember names. ![]() Recently I was looking for a distraction-free writing system.
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