
mercredi août 25, 2004
Perfect Blog Reader
The ideal
blog reader or client RSS aggregator is probably somewhere in between bloglines.com and NetNews Wire (MacOS only)
or Firefox's Sage.
I don't have a rich client blog reader. I use a combination of online
service plus a browser plugin for notification purposes. So far this is
what has worked best for me.
But the main issue I faced is that a public web site like Bloglines.com doesn't work
for non-publically accessible RSS feeds (and whe're starting to have
quite a few Sun-internal feeds showing up here and there). This is fine for
most people given blogs are usually public "speak to the world" kind of
things. But RSS is much bigger than blogs and syndicated content will
ultimately help bring
down the number of emails we receive daily while maybe also
increasing our productivity. I don't really want to compare RSS and
email, I think they're quite different. I just wish I had less email!
The whole point of having a blog reader is to remember a reader's
context (his subscriptions and what he's already read). This is quite
hard to do with a rich client if you have more than one computer. I use
at least 3 different computers: a laptop (both Windows and Linux), my
Solaris SunRay and
my Mac at home.
My experience so far is that the perfect blog reader doesn't exist and
never will (which is good for competition and innovation). But what we
need is a standard for saving a user context - all RSS subscriptions
for a given user and where he's already been. This should be stored on
a secure public server and accessed from any client (rich or thin) or
device.
Since I don't yet have a centralized online address book for email, it
may be a while before this happens.
Being still pretty new to this RSS/Blog ecology, this may be in the
works or even already available. Maybe this all but an RTFM comment (I probably need
to look at OPML.org and read more of P@'s blogs).
( août 25 2004, 12:41:46 PM CEST )
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