I've already mentioned this topic in passing. I came to the conclusion that the most useful and interesting content for me is authored content, behind which stands some lived experience and pain and emotions passed through oneself. Behind such content most often stand personalities that I respect and have been following for a long time. In the era of neural networks and just an endless amount of information, this is the only salvation.
The biggest sadness is that it's hard to find. On Telegram, for example, such channels with rare exceptions have at most a few hundred subscribers. One post appears in them once every few weeks, and even that is extremely irregular. All the top ones, no offense to them, become hostages to the fact that they need to produce content on schedule, entertain the crowd, the vast majority of which is statistically quite inexperienced. And pain doesn't come on schedule. If we're talking about Android content, then everything slides into some news agenda, dumping absolutely passable articles from Medium, or reposting memes from r/mAndroidDev. The paradox is that one post once a month gives more impact on the brain and then as a consequence on the project, than a hundred in the same time elsewhere.
With talks at conferences and posts on some well-known resources it's the same story. You need to wade through a lot of garbage retelling documentation or very specific experience with their own bicycle, to get to something that will trigger a thought process in the right direction. And with high probability this will be an author that I've already remembered as original, a bit crazy about the topic. By the way, you remember those from whom there's a lot of content, but interesting stuff is almost never there. Most often this is some hype on fashionable (but inapplicable in ordinary life) topics, from which conditional juniors blow their minds, or something frankly basic that essentially makes no sense to repeat again. We skip those. The main distinguishing feature - an avatar with the signature GDE.
I have a secret experimental channel on Telegram that makes posts a couple of times a day with the help of ChatGPT, which was given a fairly bright character in the prompt. Honestly, it's barely distinguishable from average content on schedule. Its main problem is that there's no pain or reflection in it, it's just rehashing obvious ideas. And it's immediately uninteresting to read. I've tried many times to use it to develop some thought of mine, and it always turned out bland crap. I've tried many times to generate ideas, it's incredibly bad at that. So all the letters you read I come up with myself, not a single computer was harmed. Well, except that I have a whole mind map of scattered ideas for this, which I find interesting to digest for months into some coherent thoughts.