I’ve been thinking about the
ways that I interface with feeds that I read. Specifically, how I parse through information, how I figure out what I
want to read and subscribe to and how I’d like view different types of
information.
- Subject level subscriptions part 1: Why can’t I subscribe to just some subject areas of
certain blogs? Some of the blogs I read
have 50% or higher waste – topics I don’t really care about. I should be able to subscribe to specific
topics only.
- Subject level subscriptions part II: Ditto the above concept, but for key-word
searches. I’d like to be able to point a
filter at only certain feeds – say InfoWorld – and return only their stories
from only their feeds that I’m interested in.
- Subject level subscriptions part III: Why can’t publishers get better at this? I love Slate, for instance; but I hate the
fact that I need to subscribe to their entire site to get their feed (as
opposed to certain authors or even just specific sections of their site) – I
shouldn’t need to parse through 100 Slate posts a day to get the 3 subjects I
care about.
- Feed Sharing: This one seems like it should be simple. My version of attention.xml is called Brad
Feld. He has the capacity to sort
through more information than I can and he sends me stuff that’s
interesting. That works well for me and, importantly, it cuts down on the feeds I need to read, but
the process should 1) be simpler and 2) be broader. Brad (or anyone else) should be
able to easily set up a ‘favorites’ list that I can subscribe to. When Brad is reading something in his RSS
reader that he likes he should be able to hit a button and publish that post
(not the whole feed – just the single post) to a “Feld Favorites” feed which I
can subscribe to.
Ma
Posted in: BloggingCOMMENTS (2)
On your feed sharing, check out Kunal's OutlookMT (http://www.kunal.org/outlookmt/)--it requires a certain style of feed reading (ie. using Newsgator in Outlook), and a certain type of blog (MT-based), but it works great. Robert Scoble uses it to keep what he calls a linkblog, and while his is way too high-traffic for me, if someone like Brad did it, it could be very useful.


Great post, i may blog this myself.
1 - Subject level subscription - I've been griping about this ever since I got serious into blogs. It's frustrating to have to sift through 10 posts about music to get the 1 post you're really interested in. But, I can see how a PERSONAL blogger wouldn't want someone to be able to slice and dice them. That is, if I want to present ME to readers then ME is all the personal shit that you may not care about but stuff that I want to reference later on in topics you supposedly do care about.
2 - Slate feeds - I agree, Slate is awesome, but I hate how they don't offer specific feeds! NPR does this, everyone else does this, why not Slate. Only a matter of time.
3 - On your "Brad Feld" filter comment, I think this is what Del.ic.ious is trying to do (but frankly, I'm not all that impressed with del.ic.ious). I can't tell you how many times I've had to open up my email, compose a message with a cover letter "thought you would be interested in this post." I should be able to fire off emails much easier (and have the email include the original post). Rojo is trying to make this easier.