Years ago I started using RSS to consume content and stay on top of what's going on. Today I find that there are still an unbelievable amount of people who don't understand the concept of pulling in content to a place like Google Reader as opposed to individually visiting sites (I'm talking about people outside of our techie world). I mean, RSS isn't THAT complicated, right? Then I hear spats about "RSS is dying" or "RSS is a thing of the past"... Really? I think RSS is one of the best things since sliced bread. I don't think social will overtake the need for RSS, so I'm just not quite sure I understand the nay-sayers. Care to chime in?
[+] [-] Concours|13 years ago|reply
I don't think RSS is dying and I also don't think people don't like it, it's just a complex technology for the average Joe to use, so let me try to elaborate. You need an RSS reader to use RSS, a techguy can just move on download rssowl, rssbandit...etc or use google reader, the average Joe has never heard of RSS bandit, has no clue how no clue how to use RSS on a computer and needing to download a new software or signup to another service to take advantage of RSS is another entry barrier for many people, so that's actually the main problem IMHO. Of course you have many publications with a crap user experience on their RSS full of Ads and truncated feeds ( I run a service http://www.feedsapi.com that fix both issues) , butnthere are many services to fix that.
In contrast, the entry barrier for rss on smartphone is very low, users download an RSS reader and they are ready to go. I mean, flipboard, Sparse RSS Pro, Pulse, Reeder...etc, are nothing else than RSS readers and they are very popular on all platforms ( android, iOs, windowsphone....) and the average joe tend to love them as well, so I think RSS just need more time to fully reach the average Joe. Social Media is no replacement for RSS, I don't get why people tend to compare both, it feels like comparing oranges to apples.
P.S. sorry for my english, not a native speaker.
[+] [-] fluxon|13 years ago|reply
(Though I see its value for text, Google Reader (web) is weak for non-text media: it's off the main Google menubar, has no auto download, and so acts merely as a hidden, online-only index to updated content. I highly value downloading for reading/playback offline (or frequent 0-bars situations).)
A chunk of RSS's potential userbase just gravitates to what they use every day: Twitter, since "feeds" work much the same, with the addition of comments and a promotion mechanism (retweet or not).
Just thinking aloud.
[+] [-] Crunchy|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mooism2|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] shyn3|13 years ago|reply
I think it stems from the following:
1) People want full-text feeds including images, video, and audio. Companies try to get the user to come to their site so there isn't an incentive to advertise this option if you are using full-text whereas if you aren't you probably don't have as many users subscribing.
2) Sometimes you can't tell how many people are coming from a certain feed from a certain source. If you have full-page feeds and someone is using a web-based service that stores the feeds instead of querying for each user the website may never know that an article was read.
I think there needs to be a way to measure feed reach in order to increase adoption for such an awesome technology.
[+] [-] Toph|13 years ago|reply
Social media, when properly set and curated, have been slightly better at filtering some of the noise (albeit there are some repetition) but then lacks the volume of good stuff that RSS goes over that is being missed.
I need a solution in between.
[+] [-] georgemcbay|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] saurik|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] majani|13 years ago|reply
[+] [-] bluestix|13 years ago|reply
I like it so much I built an RSS search engine.
http://rssident.com
It's still a work in progress but I will be adding several new features soon.
For any of you that need jobs this is an easy way to find them:
http://rssident.com/mash/?t=job&e=java
http://rssident.com/mash/?t=job&e=ruby
http://rssident.com/mash/?t=job&e=php
Or by individual feed:
http://rssident.com/feeds/?t=job&e=java
Right now it's only indexing feeds I added but soon anyone will able to add whatever feeds they want.