Over the past few months I’ve been quietly obsessed with something: building a content system.
I started experimenting with ways to generate meaningful content from the things I already consume and think about like videos I watch, podcasts I listen to, blogs I read, and the ideas constantly running through my head. Step by step, I ended up creating a full editorial #pipeline: curating sources, shaping ideas, verifying alignment and accuracy, and publishing automatically.
In the end, what emerged is a system that saves me hours every day.
But why build all of this?
Mostly to keep track of the things I believe are important to remember.
Everything now gets published automatically to the #Deeditt blog and social networks. I have to admit something: I don’t particularly enjoy the social media game. But it’s part of the landscape, and if you want your project to stay alive in the digital world, you have to play by some of its rules.
This system allows Deeditt to remain present in that social and digital space while I focus on what really matters: building Deeditt itself.
It’s essentially an endless content feed, continuously transforming fragments of knowledge, ideas from podcasts, notes from articles, moments from videos, and my own reflections, into something shareable.
So yes, I’ve been a bit quiet lately. But I was still moving forward, still pointing toward the future.
And interestingly, one of those small ideas that kept circling in my mind started to become clearer: what if Deeditt evolved into a place dedicated to experience-based #knowledge?
If you look at the internet today, different platforms specialize in different kinds of knowledge:
• #Wikipedia is for structured factual knowledge
• #LinkedIn is for professional knowledge
• #Reddit is for messy, chaotic, collective knowledge
But what about experienced knowledge.. what people actually lived, tried, failed at, and learned from?
That’s the space Deeditt was always meant to explore.
Deeditt was created to keep track of human experiences, and strangely, that might be one of the least explored knowledge spaces on the internet.
Of course, there’s a constant tension in this space:
dopamine vs reflection.
The internet rewards fast, viral, superficial content, but real experiences, real learning, and real understanding are slow. They require depth, effort, and reflection.
Deeditt sits right in that tension, probably writing is not for all but if you accept it as me with the socials, writing can offer many advantages in the long run.
