Rubénerd :)

Friday 21st August 2009

Google Reader should update feed addresses

Google Reader redirect example

Here’s an idea for a Google Reader feature that in my opinion is long overdue. If Reader attempts to fetch a web feed and it encounters a 301 permanent redirect to a legitimate new address it should update its own records in user accounts to point to the new address instead of still pinging the old one.

I ask for my own selfish reasons because as of now more people are still subscribed to my blog here through the old http://rubenerdshow.com/blog/feed/ address instead of http://rubenerd.com/feed/. Each request to the old URI takes more effort and bandwidth than the new one, and I’ve noticed items that appear in the new one instantly can sometimes take an hour or longer to appear in the old one. An automatic update would fix this.

Good idea?

Tuesday 19th May 2009

Web aggregators: the chocolate shop problem

Max Brenners at the Esplanade in Singapore, by Angie Teo
Max Brenners at the Esplanade in Singapore, by Angie Teo

One of the problems with using a feed aggregator or blog reader is you tend to act like a kid in a chocolate shop: you just keep adding and adding feeds because they’re free and they’re full of goodness until one day you’re subscribed to so many feeds and you’re getting so many entries you start to drown. As a result you start to click the "Clear Unread Items" or equivalent more often than you’d care to admit.

I’ve never understood why blog aggregators must treat each item as if it were an email or to do list item in dire need of my attention. When I read a newspaper or magazine I don’t read every article or story, I only read what’s interesting to me. I guess the comeback to that would be that if you receive too many email messages you only start reading ones you find interesting or necessary, but I think that’s pushing it.

What metaphor do we use to replace the proverbial story “to do list” though if it’s so flawed?

Bloglines unread items
Whoops!

As with a newspaper, unless we specify we want to keep something or share it with friends, we probably don’t want to read the same story twice. By greying out an item from our subscribed feeds our software is telling us we don’t need to read that material any more because we’ve already seen it. Short of deleting a story altogether from our own cache of previously read articles, this is probably the most logical thing to do.

ASIDE: Notice my careful wording above, I said the software tells us that we’ve already "seen" a story, not read it. Unfortunately we’ve only scratched the surface here, should our software be able to tell me whether I just skimmed an article, just looked at the pictures or read it in full? Could it have a timer perhaps? I’m getting in way over my head!

That’s not to say though we want to be prompted in the opposite way if we haven’t read an item, because again to me that’s akin to the software telling me I’m slack that I haven’t read every single story, which I don’t want to do. But then again, it’s useful to tell me what I haven’t read, otherwise how do I know what’s new? Bummer, we’re back where we started!

I’ve often heard it said that one of the strengths of computers are their ability to process large volumes of data in an instant that would take a human an eternity. Silly jokes about politicians and physical education teachers aside, as humans we have the upper hand in having intelligence. The fact that so called "tags" and "categories" even exist for posts and other media online shows that artificial intelligence still has a long, long, long way to go. And I mean a LONG way. A computer can download every news story and media item from hundreds of feeds to my aggregator every time I check my browser and perhaps do some rudimentary filtering based on what I’ve previously read or what I’ve defined as my topics of interest, but it’s speed and accuracy abruptly stop there. "Rudimetary" is the operative word.

I have a lot of reading ahead of me!
Whoops!

Perhaps it’s not the software that needs retraining, it’s us. Perhaps I need to train myself to stop subscribing to every single news feed I come across with the thought in the back of my mind that my aggregator will handle it for me somehow. Because every morning when I wake up, turn my computer on and am told that I have 1000+ unread stories along with comments from friends for several dozen of them, I end up just reading just the latter, a few other bits and pieces, then leave. I reckon if my Google Reader and Bloglines accounts told me exactly how many items I’ve failed to read over the years, the integer would be of sufficient length that if I had that amount in my bank account, I could purchase myself a small planet and retire there.

I haven’t even touched on the problem of missing out on good stories I should have read because there’s so much other stuff crowding around it, but I suspect if you’ve read this far and use an aggregator yourself you don’t need me to elaborate any further!

As I’ve eluded to previously, what I really need is an electronic secretary of some sort who picks out important blog posts, emails, Tweets and so forth, then sends them to me in an email for me to skim each morning. Technologies like RSS and Atom allow us to deliver that material, but after that computers still have a long way to go.

Thesis material perhaps?

Wednesday 14th May 2008

Camino and Google Reader atom problems

Sharon777 on Twitter pointed out a possible problem with either the Camino browser or Google Reader. If you use Camino to browse someone’s Google Reader Shared Items page (such as mine or Whole Wheat Radio’s), an web feed notification icon doesn’t appear in the address bar:

Google Reader in Camino not showing a web feed icon

However if you click View Page Source in the View menu, you can clearly see the link to the web feed:

Google Reader in Camino not showing a web feed icon

I can’t really think why it shouldn’t find it. Perhaps Camino has trouble with Atom feeds as opposed to RSS. When I have some more time I’ll see if I can reproduce the error somehow.

Monday 09th April 2007

Rubenerd Show 223 (Mon 09/Apr/2007)

The crazy huge moth episode!

Giant scary tropical flying moths, listener feedback (birthday and departing wishes on Rubenerd Forum by Manny the Mailman, Mr Bunny, Surrealist and Felix) moving back to Singapore (parallel universes, loud removalist packer peoples), birthday celebrations (your host, host’s sister Elke, Ruben’s crappy April fools joke, the Overnightscape show, Dave Winer’s Scripting News), cheap decorating on a MacBook Pro and MacBook (tickets and whatnot), a Jazz club in Singapore, signs you read too many weblogs, Dave Winer’s phonebook of developments, never deleting old podcasts since 2004 and Douglas Adams on things that happen because they happen.

Download MP3 ↓ 30:00 minutes, 13.8MiB

You can also stream this episode and view its Internet Archive page.

Tuesday 01st August 2006

Rubenerd Show 141 (Tue 01/Aug/2006)

Tonight’s the Chinese Barbecue episode

RSS/Atom versus email newsletters, useless emails and spam (eBay Australia, the new “PayPal Australia Newsletter”, poor grammar, CafePress not unsubscribing), a Caucasian Guy at a Chinese Barbecue (Crystal’s birthday) comparing east Asian barbecues to Aussie Barbies (labeled cups, soft drink instead of alcohol) and Mr Vampire from Hong Kong.

Download MP3 ↓ 10:00 minutes, 4.6MiB

You can also stream it and view its Internet Archive page.

Dedicated to my groovy late mum Debra Schade.