Channel Surfer lets you watch YouTube like it’s old-school cable TV
There’s a fun new way to watch YouTube: by channel surfing like a boomer with cable TV. This creative idea comes from London-based developer Steven Irby, who has just launched a web app called Channel Surfer, which presents interesting YouTube videos in an interface resembling a retro-looking TV guide.
At launch, there are 40 of these custom-built “channels” to choose from, including those focused on general topics like news, politics, sports, and lifestyle content, as well as a selection of music channels and others with a more tech focus. The latter group includes channels like “AI & ML,” “Code & Dev,” “Space,” “Retro Tech,” “Tech & Gadgets,” and “Gaming. ” As you move between channels, you join the video being played mid-stream.
You can also scroll ahead to look at programming planned for the next 24 hours.
This makes watching YouTube feel a lot like watching old-school live television — an experience that’s proven popular on free streaming services like Plex, Pluto TV, Tubi, and others, which offer lineups of live channels playing TV shows and movies. YouTube itself, meanwhile, dominates TV streaming in the U.
“I miss channel surfing and not having to decide what to watch. I want to just sit and tune into what’s on and not think about what to watch next. ” “My boomer Mom watches cable TV.
I want the same, but with my YouTube channels instead.
Also, it’s weirdly comforting to know I’m watching with other people,” he said.
“I have so much creativity from my long, weird journey. I can’t bear the thought of being a Jira ticket monkey anymore,” he said.
Under the hood, Channel Surfer is, for now, a static Next.
js site that uses PartyKit and is hosted on Cloudflare.
The channels and music it offers are from Ibry’s own hand-picked list.
GitHub Actions is used to run a script that refreshes the data daily.
There’s no back end yet.
And while Claude assisted in the coding process, the site is not “vibe-coded,” Irby says.
Eventually, Irby says he’d love to bring the app to TV platforms, like Fire TV, Google TV, and others. (It also runs on mobile devices and tablets, but needs more work. )
But if you subscribe to Irby’s newsletter, you’re given the option to import your own YouTube subscriptions into the app. It’s a quick-and-dirty process to do so: You drag a “Channel Surfer” bookmarklet to your bookmarks bar, then open your YouTube subscriptions, and click the bookmarklet. The process begins, directing you back to the app where you paste the copied JSON text into a box and click an “import” button. This adds your own channels to Channel Surfer’s existing lineup, potentially giving you hundreds more channels to watch in this format. The site’s existence harkens back to the web’s earlier days, filled with fun experiments and creativity. For Irby, that’s the point.
“I’m obsessed with showing the world that the old web is still alive and well,” he says.
“It’s just buried under a mountain of slop
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