Danny Sullivan, one of the guys behind the popular Search Engine Watch blog has written a blog post about his RSS reader of choice. The post is entitled Reading Feeds With RSS Bandit and begins
Dave Naylor and I were IMing
today about IE 7's new RSS feature. He was very excited. I haven't tried it yet,
but the screenshot he sent me didn't make me think it was better than the RSS Bandit feed reader I currently use.
I've been meaning to write about that anyway, so this gave me an excuse.
Let me preface this by saying that everyone seems a bit different on how they
read feeds. Some do it for pleasure, and they aren't worried about missing
something, in the same way they might not worry if they missed a day or two of
reading the newspaper. Others read for work and maybe manage a ton of feeds
(that's me). Others seem to want to read one feed at a time, something I've seen
some people describe as "wrong" or "stupid."
My feeling is that there is no "right" way to read feeds. Anyone who tells
you that is the stupid one. What's the "right" way to read a newspaper or watch
TV. Can you start with Business and then read the main news sections. Do you
need to watch each program from beginning to end or is flipping allowed?
Read feeds however you want. What is helpful is to hear about how others do,
because you can pick up tips or ideas on how you might improve your own
reading.
I'm going to explain how I've shifted in my own reading. I hope some find
that useful, but like I said, I'm not saying this is the "right" way to read nor
that I use the "right" tool that everyone should use. It just what works for me.
Danny goes on to talk about the various ways one could choose to use RSS Bandit
from treating it like a mail reader and viewing posts one by one as new
items show up in each feed to consuming them in the "river of news"
style by always reading the "Unread Items" folder. In building RSS Bandit
we've tried to make it flexible so it can be adapted to multiple
reading habits since as Danny says in his post there is no "right" way
to read feeds. Different people find different approaches more suited
to their needs.
One thing Danny suggested which I haven't commented on before in my
blog is the ability to organize feeds according to tags. I've thought
about this a little over the past few weeks, specifically I've been
comparing the user experience of Windows Live Favorites which is folder based with that of del.icio.us and Bookmarks in the Google Toolbar
which are both tag based. One thing that seems clear is that it would
be difficult to mix and atch (i.e. merge) both models. We'd probably
have to let users switch between a traditional folder view which would
use the current tree control and a tag view which would use a control
similar to Eyefinder
which mimics the Outlook 2003 user interface. Of course, this assumes
that the main benefit of the tag view is so people can have feeds show
up in multiple 'folders'. If people want other tag-based user interface features such as tag clouds
then that would be problematic to implement as a Windows user interface
component but may work as a newspaper view that is tied to the
tag-based view.
The more I think about it the more I think there is
definitely room for experimentation here. Now if only I could find some free time to experiment with some of these ideas. :)