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Buttondown's blog

Email could have been X.400 times better The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails Better in-app previews Analytics 3.0 Subscriber ID variables Comments! Send latest premium action Automation filtering Free API subscribers Surveys in automations Reply to replies Labels for RSS feeds How Jeremy Singer-Vine curates curious datasets for readers 2023 (and what's next) Email vs web content Sort by engagement Better gift subscriptions How Andy Dehnart built a career reviewing television New email template Email-based automations Opt-in reply tracking Automatic alt text More social network integrations Sort by metadata Overlarge image warnings Automation tag actions Pause emails mid-flight Search tags and automations Gift via automations Subscriber-driving emails Programmatic webhooks Email page views Tag statistics Discord webhook formatting Automatic subscriber cleanup RSS subscriber count Weekly subscriber reports More list columns Customizable list views How Max Voltar turned a side gig into a trusted keyboard resource How Nick Disabato runs two newsletters from one design consultancy Made-for-you share images Automation improvements End-of-email surveys Filter by date Survey-triggered automations More automation functionality New webhooks How France Insider built a news service with paid subscribers Email as primary key How John Willshire unites two businesses in one newsletter Confirmation reminders Email churned subscribers Email-to-draft Subscriber metadata columns ChatGPT integration Faster web archives Referral program Better search results TikTok embeds Subscriber timeline Spotify embeds Improved RSS-to-email Subscribe page OG image New analytics page Google Tag Manager Even more subscriber types Integrating Duda with Buttondown Linktree integration guide Advanced and enterprise plans Framer integration guide API requests page Team collaboration In-email surveys Better CSS settings Better RSS automation fetching! Editor toolbar improvements Smart filters Faster emails page RSS automations Faster email analytics Zapier error codes Image accessibility checks Tags vs newsletters OG image picker Image editor improvements API bulk actions Improved OpenAPI spec Mastodon support Better subscriber filtering Better subscriber validation Hotkey support! Programmatic access to analytics Stronger bulk actions Faster archive page Custom canonical URLs Email slug and metadata Improved writing interface Generating a Typescript router in Django Filter emails by source
How Graham Oliver shares life in Taiwan and spreads positivity
Asharee Peters · 2025-07-28 · via Buttondown's blog

Tell us a bit about yourself and your background.

My name is Graham Oliver and I'm a teacher at National Taiwan University, a writer, and an editor. I've been teaching for more than ten years, at both the university and high school level. My wife and I have always wanted to live outside the United States, and six years ago we got the chance. We moved to Taipei, thinking of it as a little adventure, that we'd stay there for a couple of years. But two things happened: we loved living in Taiwan a lot more than we thought, and COVID changed our worldview.

What do you write about in your newsletter?

I started my newsletter at the beginning of 2017, while in grad school for creative writing. I was reading a lot, writing a lot of book reviews, and talking to other writers a lot. The experience was invigorating. So many ideas were floating through my head, and I wanted to capture them for myself as well as share them with friends and family outside of social media. The kinds of things I wanted to say weren't focused enough for articles or essays, and a newsletter seemed more convenient than a blog for the readers I was aiming at.

Then, I graduated, we moved to Taiwan, and my writing shifted focus to that experience. Each month, I try to zoom in on one or two interesting things I've encountered: from my job, to the healthcare system, to making friends, to local traditions, to what it's like to return to the US for a hectic once-a-year trip. In addition, I always share links to neat things I think my reader might like to check out, mostly with some connection to Taiwan but also general good stuff. I try to keep the vibes mostly positive, and I try to write about things that haven't already been written about by a hundred other people.

So, after reading other people's migration experiences, I narrowed it down to Substack, Beehive, Ghost, or Buttondown. Buttondown won quickly.

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

My newsletter's first home was TinyLetter, but then MailChimp shut it down, so I was looking for another venue. I ended up spending a year on WordPress, thinking I could use it as a homepage and a newsletter. But it didn't work as well as I wanted to - the newsletter feature had several bugs and unintuitive functions, and honestly I'm not motivated enough to take advantage of the website customization it offers. I also throw my content onto Medium, but its account requirement for access doesn't fit my readers.

So, after reading other people's migration experiences, I narrowed it down to Substack, Beehive, Ghost, or Buttondown. Buttondown won quickly - the other three have associations with far-right political content, generative AI, and cryptocurrency that I don't want to support. Additionally, I didn't read anything negative about Buttondown, and the features lined up perfectly with what I wanted to do.

When I had a concern about what would happen to images in those imported articles, they responded quickly and didn't just answer the concern, they fully fixed the issue for me without my asking, beyond what I expected.

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

Buttondown made importing previous writing from three different platforms seamless. When I had a concern about what would happen to images in those imported articles, they responded quickly and didn't just answer the concern, they fully fixed the issue for me without my asking, beyond what I expected. They've also answered additional little questions I had as I've gotten to know the platform. Finally, they sent little check-in emails the first few months that were wholesome and encouraging.

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

Although I hesitate to say this due to the way too much focus on "discoverability" can ruin a platform, I would love to explore the other people who use Buttondown more easily. I definitely would want it to be an opt-in feature. A tiny thing: I'd also like word count to be viewable without clicking "send"–that makes me so nervous.

Anything else you’d like to add?

Just hope you stay true to the simple and direct mission that's on your front page, and don't chase after the trends that have made other platforms unpalatable.