Easton Asks: How Do You Read Web Feeds?

RSS ATOM Feed Easton Ellsworth has discovered and converted to Google Reader as his main feed reader and has followed a post from Web Worker Daily and asks How do you read RSS feeds? So, ok I’ve got my own method or pattern for reading my feeds in Google Reader – which is the only feed reader as far as I’m concerned.

So, here it goes:

  • Morning: Start with the All Items “river of news” style view going from top to bottom using my mouse scroll wheel, marking posts started (s), and shared (shift-s).
  • Daytime: Keep following the All Items view, refreshing a few times to see what’s current.
  • Evening: Focus on reading A-List feeds, and then technical feeds, then mobile device related feeds.

Overall, I really have become enamored of the river of news view that Dave Winer pioneered (thanks Dave!). Thanks for the question Easton!

As to why I read feeds, it simply is multitudes faster than individual sites.  It’s also much more up to date than traditional media, which has caused me to cancel or let expire all my magazine subscriptions.  They just can’t compare to the information shared by bloggers, or published to the news feeds.

Via: BusinessBlogWireHow Do You Read Web Feeds? My RSS Reading Habits

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Review of Feedburner by Aaron Brazell

Feedburner RSS ATOM Web Feed If you’ve been interested in how well Feedburner handles serving feeds, you may be interested in Aaron Brazell’s review.

His perspective in this review, is from the point of view of a blog network – b5media – which pumps several dozen feeds through the service.  Because of the number and variety of feeds, the needs are unique, there are some items on his “wish list” that just don’t apply to individual bloggers.

Goods stuff Aaron!

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jkOnTheRun: Reading RSS feeds in IE7 and Outlook 2007

RSS Feed Icon IE7 Outlook 2007 Have you heard of the RSS features in Internet Explorer 7?  How about Outlook 2007?  Yep, Microsoft baked RSS goodness into the two most-used desktop applications from Redmond.

What?  How well do they work?  It just so happens that Kevin Tofel has a great overview of RSS in the two products.  It really is a an honest appraisal of how well Microsoft has implemented RSS. 

Integration is quite good, but the feature set is a little lacking.  Still, if you’re starting out with RSS – these two applications will help you get a good understanding of how RSS can help you consume more information faster than simply browsing news sites.

Good read.

Via: jkOnTheRun – Overview: reading RSS feeds in IE7 and Outlook 2007

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Scobleizer: Dave Winer was right about river reading

While I’ve unsubscribed from Dave’s Scripting News feed for the time being, I also have to give him kudos for developing and describing the River of News view.  Over the past 2+ years that I’ve been using RSS for news consumption, I’ve tried about 10 or so different readers, out of which I ended up with Pluck for at least a year and a half.

This summer, however, I started playing around at other readers again and ran across a post somewhere espousing the benefits of Google Reader.  So I tried it, and liked it – a lot.  I’d tried several River of News views before, but GReader seems to hit the sweet spot for me.  Reading and marking posts in GReader’s “All Items” view (by newest) is the most efficient way for me to read feeds now – I can’t even go back to feed-by-feed reading any longer.

Also, after reading Scoble’s use of GReader’s sharing feature, I also discovered my own personalized Link Blog.  Neat how that works – if anyone is interested in what I’m reading, they can simply view my link blog.  Its the actual posts I read from my list of feeds.

Via: Scobleizer – Dave Winer was right about river reading

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No Pluck for me

Pluck Logo I’ve stopped using Pluck a few weeks ago, and finally have removed the last vestiges of it from my machines. Did IE7 cause this? Not exactly.

While the RSS/ATOM support in IE7 and Firefox contributed to this, it really is Google Reader that drove home the last nail in the coffin. The simplicity, performance, and accessibility of GReader just can’t be beat for my needs at this time.

So, it is with sadness that I am currently removing Pluck from my last machine before installing the IE7 gold release. I’ve used Pluck for 2 years and will remember it fondly.

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