Might as well add a disclaimer: back in the days, in order to find the gold nuggets on the web, you had to shift through shit. A lot of shit. But then once in a while, you find those little nuggets that made the whole shit-shifting worthwhile. Useful exercise in patience for beginner webbers maybe.
And what decides if a article is "legit and important"? If some other legit and important article links to it, of course!
And so we continue, until only the bottom-feeding "high quality" is left at the top of the search result, which is generally boring but "correct" content.
If that were true there wouldn't be so much bullshit on the first few pages. Try doing a Google search that gets lots of low-effort ad-stuffed "top x" or "best x of 2019" lists or similar garbage and changing the date range to limit results to before 2008 or thereabouts. It's incredible how much more useful, and easier to quickly evaluate, the results often are.
Sorry, I misunderstood and thought you were trying to correct me! Thanks anyway :)
I would agree, but I think the difference nowadays (had to look up I got "nowadays" right, seems I did!) is that people usually want a quality filter in front of them (like upvotes, likes, retweets or some other metric) rather than just having to judge by themselves.
In good ol' email threads, you always had to judge by yourself. In social media today, many assume quality because of metrics.
Both could be correct. Here I think "day" could make more sense. An example of the other case: "Back in the days of Fortran programming..."
If you leave out anything after "days" by just saying "back in the days" then it is like you are pausing. As in when you reminisce, "Oh, back in the days!" Maybe that is what the intention was.
In any case, the commentor was actually just saying that he thinks nothing has changed.
You need an email account in order to join a mailing list, so get one of those. Your ISP probably gives you one, but you can also use one of the more obscure email providers like yahoo or gmail if you want. I'm a fan of fastmail on my own domain.
Once you have an email address, this content is now available to you! Most mailing lists are free and easy to subscribe to.
I understand where you coming from, but I don't think this "modern web-user" is unfamiliar with what email is, so the sarcastic tone is a bit over the top and usually not appreciated on HN.
Instead you could have spent time explaining a better way of browsing the content, or what to consider when reading. Instead of assuming this person doesn't know what a email address is.