This was a good read, +Ian O’Byrne ! I’ve been doing something similar (rethinking my content across spaces), although my goal is really more curatorial; I’m totally ambivalent about platforms at this point. As I see it, platforms come and go, software comes and goes, but the real problem I have is short-term curation (i.e. something I shared a few weeks or a few months ago that I need to find again). So, for me, Inoreader is providing that solution by automatically aggregating all the platforms where I publish into one space (Google+, Twitter, my blogs, Diigo, and Pinterest). I’m then curating one stream out from that space which shows up here so that my curation efforts can be useful to others (although the real value I know is for me.. other people are busy trying to keep up with their own stuff, ha ha):http://mythfolklore.net/So far, it has been working really well. The only snag I have hit is that Pinterest RSS is buggy and may disappear (Pinterest tech support told me this week that they don’t really provide RSS at all… but the feeds are there!). No real worries, though, since PInterest is the least important of the spaces I am using, it’s no big deal to me if the Pinterest part drops off. What I am pinning at Pinterest is 99% of the time content I already have shared elsewhere already.Anyway, I am really glad to have tackled the curation question. I’d been good about archiving my blogs locally as backup… but the ephemera of Twitter and Google+ were passing me by. Inoreader has saved me by automatically aggregating that in one place for me, and I can then curate as needing (tagging, saving at more stable platforms as necessary, etc.). I still feel info-frazzled, but less so than before!!! 🙂