Matt Levine's Money Stuff is kind of a link aggregator and is undoubtedly the best resource to stay up to date on weird stuff going on in finance.
I'm almost scared to subscribe to any of these because ever since I started following Readsfast I feel like I'm drowning in content! Truly an incredible resource that is really well curated.
Thanks for inspiring me to start sharing links myself! I may start publishing a best-of on a quarterly basis.
I forgot to include yours in the post, but it also deserves a shoutout! I love the Browser and check it every week, but was unsure about promoting it now that the free version is only one link per day, but I guess that make's it the equivalent to a weekly or monthly links post in terms of volume.
- Has Posted 1000 + mini compilations of working papers and random social science findings organized around a single theme for the day. Published daily organized a central theme ( usually economics + politics)
Matt Levine's Money Stuff is kind of a link aggregator and is undoubtedly the best resource to stay up to date on weird stuff going on in finance.
I'm almost scared to subscribe to any of these because ever since I started following Readsfast I feel like I'm drowning in content! Truly an incredible resource that is really well curated.
Thanks for inspiring me to start sharing links myself! I may start publishing a best-of on a quarterly basis.
Alexander Kruel's Axis of Ordinary link posts are a must read for anyone interested in AI:
https://axisofordinary.substack.com/p/links-for-2026-03-06
agree !
It was throught a linkpost on Dynamic Ecology that I discovered your blog! They have one every Friday: https://dynamicecology.wordpress.com/
I've started a monthly linkpost since last year, that might have stuff of interest, e.g. https://criticalmaas.substack.com/p/interesting-things-i-read-or-thought-5e1
I also like to collect other people's link and fact roundups, e.g. https://criticalmaas.substack.com/i/183895232/endless-lists-of-facts
https://kottke.org/
Good post, dude. Reminded me of this old chestnut I hadn't surfed in ages.
Thanks Daniel, I agree about the value of curation.
I humbly submit my site, The Podcast Browser.com, which curates excellent non-fiction author interviews.
thepodcastbrowser.com
Arnold Kling's In My Tribe excerpts pieces from other writers, mainly economics and politics, and is a treasure.
arnoldkling.substack.com/
Stefan Schubert's The Update is excellent for links on economics, AI, and politics.
www.update.news
I forgot to include yours in the post, but it also deserves a shoutout! I love the Browser and check it every week, but was unsure about promoting it now that the free version is only one link per day, but I guess that make's it the equivalent to a weekly or monthly links post in terms of volume.
Hi Daniel! Here are some linkposts that come to mind:
Links and short notes by Roots of Progress: https://blog.rootsofprogress.org/links-and-short-notes-2026-02-20
The Browser: https://thebrowser.com/ - A classic!
a blog called bactra: https://bactra.org/links.html
David Nash compilation on all things EA development: https://gdea.substack.com/p/march-2026?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web
The " excellent " Kevin Lewis:
https://www.nationalaffairs.com/authors/detail/kevin-lewis?page=1
- Has Posted 1000 + mini compilations of working papers and random social science findings organized around a single theme for the day. Published daily organized a central theme ( usually economics + politics)
Longreads by Byrne Hobart: https://www.thediff.co/archive/longreads-open-thread-70/
The post from 13th April 2024 for example features Santi Ruiz and Felix Stocker. He has a few collaborations with Patrick Mckenzie.
Also of note are:
Chartbook by Adam Tooze: https://adamtooze.substack.com/about
I also really enjoy the " What I´m reading " or " Books read" like " What I read from Dominic Cummings and of course Tyler Cowen.
The principles to live by is also a great genre where you have one of the best examples :)
This is an amazing comment, Sam. So many good things in here.