I mentioned about a month ago how I was considering setting up a second blog so I could more easily separate my personal and professional life. And yesterday, twice, I was reminded that there is a bit of an unusual overlap when I spoke to two people: one, the spokesman for a company I regularly report on; and the second, the CEO of a company I also follow closely.
Both of them made mention of my paella (I note with sadness that only one was interested in the actual recipe however). Now this was a tremendous paella, there’s no doubt about that, but I suspect that there may be a few people out there that don’t want to know about my lunch and so I am going to highlight here an easy solution to the problem: separate RSS feeds.
I have the blog set up so that you can grab individual automated RSS feeds and so avoid having every post appear if you subscribe. I will stick the links below so at least people have an option. Of course, if you want to continue to know a little too much about my life, feel free to stick with the main RSS feed. I don’t mind in the slightest.
- Main blog feed
- Internet feed (includes all ICANN, IGF and Nominet stories)
- iPod feed
- Journalism feed
- Oxford feed
- Photos feed
- Podcast feed
- Sex.com feed
- Technology feed
- WSIS feed
You can subscribe to as many or as few as you like.
Kevin Murphy
November 16, 2006 at 5:52 pmIf you’re interested in monetizing this blog, you should consider more paella stories. There’s more money in blogging about in paella than there’ll ever be in blogging about ICANN.
Graham
November 17, 2006 at 3:28 pmHa _ Kevin – you’re not wrong. Don’t start a new blog Kieren – that’s bullshit. Throw it all in here. I only started http://www.filthyfrance.com because I couldn’t face looking at that on noodlepie every day. I reckon your paella could open more doors than any ICANN bletherings. Seriously.
Kieren
November 17, 2006 at 4:37 pmLOL. I can’t believe you’ve got a blog purely about Toulouse dog shit. What a delight for the senses.
The French and their dogs. Paris used to be disgusting but a long, long campaign finally seems to have had an impact.
Kieren