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Compulsive curiosity, or, how I built an infinite idea machine Gift details on the subscriber portal Portal link in the archive nav The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails First, add no friction: How micropayments lost and subscriptions won Filter subscribers and automations by source Automations, rebuilt What email will look like in the future Filter subscribers by bounce date and reason Email could have been X.400 times better Three features are moving behind the paywall Firewall changes and improvements Put your name and voice into your company newsletter Simplified email address settings Subscription wall Inboxes were overwhelming before we'd even named them The US government tried really hard to screw up email Public postmortem: database connection exhaustion Ask a nerd: what is the best way to unsubscribe from newsletters? Bookshop.org embeds Email was into agents before they were cool Passwordless login Rename metadata keys in bulk A spring cleaning for our legal docs Ask a nerd: what happens when you click the spam button? Passkey support for two-factor authentication How Buttondown's API versioning works Safer defaults for the email creation API How to send email to space How we enabled Content Security Policy for everyone Recovery codes for two-factor authentication Filter sent emails by engagement rate How we migrated to TypeIDs without breaking clients How we check every link in your email Use newsletter metadata in your emails Should we bring back email exploders? Sort and filter by open and click rates Custom click tracking domains More newsletter settings in the API Revamped replies Custom email templates for everyone Simplified cancellation Ask a Nerd: Does email length affect deliverability? The changelog, reborn Swedish localization Forwarding an email is not always straightforward Public descriptions for tags OpenAPI spec for archives How Rodrigo brings a humanistic view to consumer technology Survey responses on the web How Brandon Lucas Green shares his music and supports artists Subscribers can come from anywhere. Even another newsletter platform's form. Your newsletter's archives are more valuable than your list Better tag self-management Smarter automation filters Granular API keys New design settings pages Snippets Ask A Nerd: How does newsletter cadence affect deliverability? Starred views More ways to customize your archives Inbox filtering Mastodon follower analytics Ask a Nerd: What are good open, click, and response rates for an email newsletter? How we migrated our database to PlanetScale Two new archive themes Custom buttons now work in Markdown mode Ask a Nerd: Does attaching files to your newsletter hurt deliverability? Seline and Tinylytics support Unban subscribers Announcement bars for your archives Bang paths, source routing, and how email trips were planned Public postmortem: archive downtime 2025 disposables.app Russian localization Ask a Nerd: Can you improve email deliverability with a personal domain? More locale options How we interview customers at Buttondown Bluesky analytics Reply to conversations Minimum viable complexity How Jeffery Hicks goes behind-the-scenes in his newsletter Changes to our stack in 2025 2026: Emails What the hell is a UTM? TK reminders in the editor Randomize survey answer order Why we insourced analytics Scroll sync in the editor How Kelly Jensen uses Buttondown to discuss key library issues 2026: Archives How Jamie Thingelstad uses Buttondown to explore tech topics Improved filters Keeping feature creep at bay Content Security Policy in archives Open source Sniperl.ink Auto-activating RSS reader subscriptions What the hell is ActivityPub? Gift subscriptions
How Clive Thompson uses Buttondown to grow his linkblog's audience
Asharee Peters · 2025-01-13 · via

Clive Thompson is a journalist who writes about science & technology for the New York Times Magazine, Wired, and other outlets. He's also the author of Coders: The Making of a New Tribe and the Remaking of the World in 2019, and he's in the midst of a new book right now.

We chatted with Clive to learn about how he uses Buttondown to grow his audience.

Tell us a bit about yourself and your background.

I'm a writer who focuses on science, technology, and the clean-energy transition. I write magazine features for places like Wired, the New York Times Magazine and Mother Jones, and books -- my latest for Penguin was "Coders: The Making of a New Tribe and the Remaking of the World", and I'm currently writing one about how I cycled across the US last year, as a framework for thinking about how to decarbonize US mobility.

I've also been a blogger since 2002 -- for over a decade I blogged at Collisiondetection.net, then I started writing for sites like Medium and guest blogging for Boing Boing. Blogging is crucial to my thought processes; I really need to think aloud, online, in conversation with other people.

I'm also a musician on the side -- mostly with the Delorean Sisters, a country/bluegrass band, and Lipstick Driver, an indie-rock power trio.

What do you write about on your newsletter?

The "Linkfest" is pretty much what the name suggests -- it's old-school linkblogging about science, culture and technology. I follow about 450 sites using RSS, and basically hoover up their posts all day long like a baleen whale inhaling krill. Then every two weeks I take a few dozen of the most fascinating and remarkable things I've found online and write them up.

I call it "the opposite of doomscrolling" 😅

Where did you first learn of Buttondown, and what made you decide to give it a try?

I heard about it about four years ago when I was first thinking of starting a newsletter: It was one of the options I saw out there, including Ghost and Substack. I don't think Beehiiv was yet on my radar back then.

When I finally decided to launch the "Linkfest" in early 2023, I went with Buttondown because I liked the simplicity of the interface, and the fact that it was a very independent affair -- Justin himself would respond very quickly to any queries! I heavily dig smaller-scale tech and like to support it.

I also frankly appreciated that it was just a newsletter backend service, and wasn't trying to transform itself into a full-on social network or curated feed, the way Substack was evolving. I've been around tech long enough to have seen how VC "growth at all costs" pressure can deform publishing technologies. I didn't want to sign on with a place that was going to pursue that metastatic overgrowth.

What are some ways Buttondown has helped you run your email?

I particularly like the clean interface for writing posts, primarily. The analytics are also excellent -- since I'm linkblogging (i.e. I'm explicitly encouraging people to visit cool things online) it's always useful to see what people click on.

What are some things you’d be excited to see Buttondown build in the next few months?

I think I'd enjoy seeing a slightly clearer subscription flow for the type of Guardian-style subscriptions I offer. The way I run the "Linkfest" is that paying for it is entirely optional -- anyone can subscribe for free, but if you want you can kick in some monthly money, and the people who pay for it help keep it free for everyone else.

What seems to me, though, is that Buttondown's subscription flow is more geared to the more-traditional flow of newsletter subscriptions: I.e. someone signs up for a "free" tier that's maybe a bit limited, and they can "upgrade their subscription" to get the full paid stuff.

This doesn't quite fit the psychology or language that suits a Guardian-style model. There's nothing to "upgrade" to: The people getting it for free get exactly what the people who are paying for it get, lol. Really what would work best for a model like mine is to have a flow where you pump in your email and -- simultaneously, in the exact same HTML form -- you pick how much you want to support the "Linkfest" with: Free, or dial in some dough. If they pick "free", that's it, boom, their subscribed; if they pick a sum, then they get kicked to the Stripe stuff to give out a card.

It would also be nice for people to be able to, with one click, stop paying their monthly donation (if they can no longer afford to support me) but keep getting the newsletter. I'm not sure that possible right now? Seems like they'd have to unsubscribe then sign up again, this time for free.

Maybe there's already some way to customize the sign-on flow such that it operates these ways way? There didn't seem to be when I first set up my buttondown account. I've probably been too lazy to investigate it lolol