Clever ways to honor mom this Mother's Day

Retiring the RSS blog

As of now, the RSS blog joins our list of retired and archived blogs. I recommend checking out Download Squad, our software and computer blog that covers many aspects of the on-screen lifestyle and user experience.

speaking of RSS, remember that many of our blogs (including Download Squad) off RSS feeds by category.

Thanks for reading!

BloxOr Web-based RSS Reader Emulates Desktop

This is sweet. BloxOr is a Web-based RSS aggregator whose Ajaxy underpinning makes it very much like a desktop newsreader. Three viewing panes reveal the user's list of feeds, the list of items within any single feed, and the content of the feed item. This arrangement, standard on many desktop programs, eliminates the two-pane system common in Web aggregators which requires a click to see the feed item's content. BloxOr works beautifully, and registration requires only a username and password; no email address.

WordPress 2

After rumors met silence from the WordPress.org site, an official announcement has finally been posted: WordPress 2.0 has been released. I haven't yet tested it (though I trust WordPress, I wouldn't dare upgrade before backing up my databases and WP folders), but I haven't seen (substantial) reports of migration problems. WordPress 2 is named "Duke," and documented upgrades include a WYSIWYG entry-writing interface (it's about time!) and inline image uploading (it's asbout time!). There is also some kind of Ajaxy-sounding drag-and-drop of interface elements. WordPress has done amazingly well to date, thanks largely to its (relative) ease of installation and operationsl quickness--both selling points when compared to Movable Type, in particular. The program's geekiness, while appealing to many users, probably holds it back from more widespread use. The new WP2 features make it sound ready to rock in a bigger arena. Here is the announcement and download page.

RSS mashup: Amazon, eBay, Yahoo! product results

A new RSS mashup site acts as a meta search engine reaching into Amazon, Google, eBay, Yahoo!, Flickr, YouTube, and Technorati. You cannot mash all the search results into one feed, but you can merge Amazon, eBay, and Yahoo! Shopping into a single product feed, which is damn convenient. The site is weak on design, but it works. Used to be called Longtail, but (according to a posted explanation) that term has been trademarked by its popularizer, Chris Anderson. The mashup site is now called BaeBo, and is operated by Fancis Shanahan. (BaeBo is the language spoken in the Solomon islands ... perhaps it has other meanings, too.)

Feed Aggregation Made Easy by Google Reader API

Niall Kennedy has documented an API for Google Reader, beating Google to a public release of how developers can build their own feed-reading applications atop Google's engine. An update to Niall's original post reveals that the product manager of Google Reader confirmed the accuracy of Niall's work, and asserted that Google built the API first, then contstructed Google Reader as just one example of what could be done. The implication here is that Google might well develop new feed-reading applications--something to look forward to. Further, Google plans to release an official API before long, opening the doors to third-party applications.

Ads in RSS: Obnoxious Works

Don't get me wrong; I'm all for ads in RSS, and have said so for months. I have intuitively felt that inconspicuous ads would probably work best, if only because they would piss off readers less than big, loud ads. However, a study from Pheedo indicates the reverse is true, and it's two layers of bad news. First, ads run as separate RSS feed items are far more successful (generating about eight times the clickthroughs) as ads embedded in RSS items. Then, it turns out that blitzing the feed with ads in every other item is the most successful tactic of all. Of course, you might lose most of your readers, but the remaining ones will be clicking your ads.

'Twas the Week Before Xmas, and All Through the Network...

This weekend it's going to be quiet as a library in here. We're doing some maintenance—big, important stuff that I'd tell you about except then I'd have to be killed, and besides, I don't undertand it in the slightest. Posting in this blog will be light to nonexistent, and the comment sections will be entirely broken. Save up your rants and raves 'til Monday morning. Thanks!

Yahoo! Partners with Six Apart to Distribute Movable Type

Yahoo! has agreed to provide Movable Type as the default blogging solution in its extensive small-business suite of services. The other hand will get washed as parent company Six Apart directs small-business traffic to Yahoo! for a complete ISP/merchant/blogging package. There's nothing new about Web-hosting accounts with Movable Type pre-installed; the Movable Type site has a recommendation page for such services, to which Yahoo! has not been added.

When I first glanced at the e-mail press release about this announcement, I expected to read that Yahoo! had acquired Six Apart—that would be an appropriate complement to Google's ownership of Blogger.com. Of course, Yahoo! provides a newbie-friendly blogging experience with Yahoo! 360, which could possibly be interpreted as competition to the much more established (and feature-rich) Blogger. But Six Apart's three platform levels (Movable Type, TypePad, and Live Journal) cover all the bases and could vault Yahoo! into a whole new position in the blogging wars.

Protopage: Ajax-Driven Personal Pages

protopage

Ajaxy personal pages with newsreaders are gaining traction and usability. Protopage is a free service that is astonishing easy to use and doesn't even require registration. (If you create a page and wish to make it persist at an easy-to-remember URL, you must register. But it's still free.) Floating information panels can be dragged around the screen, and there are three basic types: RSS reader; sticky note; and link panel. As far as I can tell there is no way to add a photo to a page, which is a shame. Protopage also provides a default search panel with keyword boxes for Google, Yahoo!, Dictionary.com, and Wikipedia.

Overall a simple product, but the RSS panel does allow OPML uploads, and you can fashion more than one panel for extra sorting power. All colors and backgrounds are customizable with sliders and drop-down menus. You can add pages to your Protopage space, and make those pages public or private individually. A mechanism for inviting friends is furnished, but there's no integrated social action here. You share you page by giving someone the URL, and, of course, friends can build link panels with each other's addresses.

Perhaps the funnest application of Protopage would be to share a password, and get a group together to build a space. Protopage would be an entertaining environment in which to assemble news, links, and notes. Conversations could transpire on the sticky notes. More widgets are needed to bring this thing to life, though. Give it a calendar and photo uploading, and Protopage would start to rock.

Yahoo! Mail Beta Adds RSS

Yahoo! again demonstrates its facility with RSS by adding feeds to the beta Mail which is still in restricted distribution. (Original review of it here.) Yahoo! Mail takes advantage of the Outlook-styled interface to create an intuitive RSS package. It's preloaded with selected feeds, and, remarkably, that selection appears personalized. I'm waiting for confimration of this, but it seems that the preset feeds are taken from profile information and personal-interest choices in Yahoo! 360. Naturally, that information wouldn't be available for every user in a wide rollout of the new Yahoo! Mail, but millions of people have Yahoo! IDs that contain a bit of profiling, so perhaps Yahoo! plans to mine every bit if personalizable information it can get. I'm all for it. This level of integration makes for a satisfying experience from the first click.

yahoo mail beta rss 01

Of course, you can add feeds. Yahoo! provides a recommended list of about 25 feeds, asnd users can specify an RSS address. NOTE: Users should be able to paste in a Web-page address also, and the feed reader should have the smarts to find the feed; Yahoo! has started a tradition of RSS invisiblity in My Yahoo!, and it should be carried over into Mail.

Somewhat oddly, Yahoo! presents the feed in a three-pane view: feed list on the left, feed items in the middle … and nothing in the right-hand vertical pane. I expected the source page for the feed item to appear in that pane, and was disappointed to see Yahoo! opening a new browser window to display that page. that system works best on some monitors and resolutions, granted. I'd like to have a view choice. Put the source page in the same window as the feed item, and you're really starting to emulate a desktop newsreader. Since Yahoo! mail (beta) emulates a desktop mail program, this would make sense.

Good start! Excellent start. Yahoo! is going to have one rowdy, boat-rocking launch when the new Mail emerges from beta.

RSS Package Tracking

Man, this is a good idea. Simple Tracking interfaces with UPS and the Post Office ()not with FedEx, alas) to track packages, and provides an RSS feed for continued tracking. It's a no-brainer when you think about it, eliminating the need to repeatedly check UPS or USPS every step of the package's itinerary. DHL and FedEx support is promised.

Reading RSS in iPods with iFeedPod

For Mac users only: iFeedPod allows downloading of OPML files (indexes of RSS feed collections) to iPods for offline, portable reading. It's free; PayPal donation of five dollars is requested. I'd like to see something like this for PSP and other multipurpose devices. [via HB3R3W]

Feedster Top 500

The new Feedster Top 500 blogs list is out, and it makes an interesting browsing section, especially if you skip past the headline acts that everyone knows about. Speaking of those headliners, though, I can't stop myself from mentioning that five of the top ten are Weblogs Inc. properties. the RSS Weblog in slightly further down: number 238, to be exact.

Xbox 360 Fanboy Opens

Pardon this bit of network promo. Our Joystiq gaming site has opened its first affiliate—Xbox 360 Fanboy—and we're jazzed about it. Go to it. You'll laugh, you'll cry, it'll become a part of you. In fact, you might have to scrub it off in the shower.

Technorati Update

After taking flak for months about Technorati performance issues, David Sifry find reason to brag. He has been promising (see his comment here) a big infrastructure upgrade to be completed this fall, and now that it is finished, speed tests show off Technorati in a good light. A graph shows Technorati completing searches as quickly as Google's Blogsearch and a mysterious entity Sifry calls "Yahoo Blog Search." I'm not incapable of horrendous oversights, but I have searched both my memory and past entries, and see no such product offered by Yahoo!—save the mixed news/blog search results at Yahoo! News, which can hardly be called a blog search engine. Is Sifry talking about the unofficial Yahoo! blog search engine put up by Threadwatch?

Anyway, Sifry's blog post notes some bragging rights: "Technorati's index is the most comprehensive, and has the fastest updates. The index is over 3 years old, currently 21.5 million blog posts and over 1.7 billion links are indexed. Our median time to index is now under 3 minutes from the moment a blog post is created."

Next Page >

RESOURCES

RSS NEWSFEEDS

Powered by Blogsmith

Other Weblogs Inc. Network blogs you might be interested in: