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November 2006

Thursday, November 30, 2006

links for 2006-12-01

Chat with Me Live Tonight

I will be a guest on Scott Baradell's online radio program tonight at 9 PM EST. Feel free to drop in. The call-in number is 646-915-8556. Get all the show details here.

Why Yahoo is Backing Away from RSS

Has anyone noticed that Yahoo's love affair with RSS seems to be withering? In 2004 and 2005 Yahoo was all over feeds. It was an early leader in driving adoption, as a matter of fact. But in recent months I question whether they remain committed to RSS as a platform.

This is more than conjecture. In the past few weeks Yahoo has rolled out three major new web sites - Yahoo! Food, Yahoo! Advertising and Yahoo! TV. They're great sites, but none of them has feeds. There's a reason why - eyeballs.

First, think of the lost opportunity here. The food site should have an RSS feed for recipes. The TV site could have streamed programming listings with feeds. And the advertising site should take all of those great insights they're now getting from the ANA and package them into feeds. What's worse is the advertising site has podcasts that you can't even subscribe to! (See comments - you can subscribe to the podcasts)

All of this is a bit of a head scratcher. Why is Yahoo, a site that had been an ardent promoter of RSS, now seemingly putting it all on the back burner? They shipped three heavily promoted sites without feeds. This isn't an oversight. It's deliberate. Something bigger is going on here.

My gut feeling is that Yahoo is trying to create content that you can only get on their sites and nowhere else. It's all very Lloyd Braun. They want consumers spending as much time as possible on their properties. If they put RSS feeds on these sites, it will mean fewer page views because people will only click in on content that they really care about. In other words, it means less time spent. Browsing and clicking creates page views. By skipping RSS, they will serve up more ads.

Could this be the beginning of a larger trend?

::Later: more from Rafat Ali on Yahoo's eyeball strategy and from W.B. Macnamara, who reminds us that the media is still all about pageviews.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

More Fundraising with Widgets

Nonprofits are catching on quick that blog widgets can raise money for causes. One campaign is within reach of its goal. Beth Canter blogs that he Sharing Foundation, an NGO that works directly with local officials, orphanages, and others in Cambodia, is within reach thanks to widget marketing.

Heifer International rolled out a similar initiative to tackle hunger and poverty in developing nations.  Thanks to wordsthatwork for submitting via del.icio.us.

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

links for 2006-11-29

Newsgator Launches Java RSS Reader for Mobile Devices

Newsgator has rolled out a beta RSS reader for phones that support J2ME (a flavor of Java). This includes Blackberries. The reader is in partnership with Freerange Communications and syncs up with Newsgator's servers. This ensures that what you read in one place won't show up in the other. Newsgator launched a reader for Windows Mobile devices earlier this year.

Blastfeed Filters Your Feeds

Once you've been bitten by the RSS bug, it's hard to turn back. However, at the same time you're likely to fall prey to it's biggest disadvantage - information overload. It's very easy once you get started to gorge on feeds. Before you know it, you can have hundreds of them. This is giving rise to new kinds of utilities that manage your feeds for you.

One new one that caught my eye is Blastfeed. The company, based in France, can take one or more RSS feeds or an OPML file and filter them based on certain keywords. This is a really handy utility. Think about it. Let's say you've identified the 100 or 200 most influential feeds (note I said feeds, not blogs) that cover your industry. You can import these into Blastfeed and get alerts via email, IM or RSS when certain terms are mentioned, e.g. a client or a competitor.

Blastfeed isn't going to get me to unsubscribe to my favorite feeds. However, what it will do is give me a way to track more closely what's being said within them. I have added a couple of these feeds to my browser and my personalized start page for quick and easy monitoring. Right now the site is in a private beta, but I have five 100 invites (thanks guys!) to give away first come, first serve to folks who email me.

This is only the beginning. Filtering services are going to get a lot smarter and probably will be integrated into existing RSS platforms. It's all going to get to a point where the reader knows which feed items you're more likely to read first and will prioritize your lists accordingly. In the meantime, Blastfeed is a winner if you're looking to augment how you read feeds.

YouTube on YourPhone

The New York Times reports that YouTube has hooked up with Verizon Wireless in an exclusive deal that will bring its videos to cell phones. You need to be a Vcast subscriber to view them.

Monday, November 27, 2006

links for 2006-11-28

Best Buy Sponsors Blog Roll-up

Kudos to Best Buy. The have partnered with Federated Media to sponsor the ultimate holiday shopping blog for gadget freaks. The site rolls up some of the best consumer electronics bloggers on the Web. This is a smart marketing idea, although it would have been nicer to see Best Buy participating too.

How One Blogger Hustles for Stories

Marshall Kirkpatrick doesn't have a nickname, but if he did it should be something like Charlie Hustle because it conveys exactly what he does week in and week out. (Please forget for a moment that the real Charlie Hustle, Pete Rose, has issues with gambling! No connection here.)

If you want to understand what it takes to become a popular blogger, read Marshall's post. He was doing a fantastic job as one member of Techcrunch's "staff," but now he's on to bigger things like saving the world. His tips cover ...

  • Using a startpage
  • Organizing a feed reader
  • Subscribing to high priority sources via SMS

Oh and if you read carefully you'll notice something. PR people are not mentioned. Coincidence? Hardly. We're being circumvented by good feed reading techniques and online sleuthing - at least in the blogosphere. The solution is to become part of it. Make it easy for bloggers by giving them compelling feeds, not just your press releases.

For a model, take a look at what Reuters Alertnet is doing with feeds. Not only can you subscribe to feeds for particular countries, but you can even create low graphic feeds, strip out news for blog-only RSS and more.

Good luck to Marshall.

Digg Issues Cease and Desist to Diggdot.us

Diggdot.us, a site that mashes up digg, del.icio.us and Slashdot, has received a cease and desist letter from digg's lawyers. Other similar mirrors have received the same. As a result, diggdot.us has changed its name to Doggdot.us, however, it continues to index digg's feed with an asterisk in the name.

Digg has spurred a cottage industry of Web sites that scrape their feeds. In most cases, these sites layer on value-added services. For example, duggtrends caches all digg pages and provides rich stats.

Doggdot.us (formerly digggdot.us) continues provides direct links to digg pages, which makes it a lot easier for the user. They skip the visit to digg entirely and go right to the page. I subscribe to their feed. I want non-stop service, but digg loses the opportunity to serve me with ads. You gotta wonder how long that will keep up.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

links for 2006-11-27

Saturday, November 25, 2006

links for 2006-11-26

Friday, November 24, 2006

links for 2006-11-25

Without Jason, Weblogs Inc Will Lose Its Edge

I was saddened to hear about Jason Calacanis' recent departure from AOL. I don't blame him for leaving. It looks like he felt there wouldn't be any support for his initiatives under their new CEO. So what now?

Companies are about more than just one individual. As much as we would like to think that Jason Calacanis or even Steve Jobs for that matter are indispensable, they're not. It takes a village.

Still, a charismatic leader sets the direction and the tone. And there's no doubt that once such a person leaves an organization, there are changes. Post Calacanis, the rest of the  Weblogs Inc team including co-founder Brian Alvey and its key bloggers like Peter Rojas and crew continue to remain on board. But I would expect changes. Weblogs Inc will become even more sanitized.

It's tempting to look into a crystal ball and predict what will happen. There are usually signposts to guide you. In this case, it's edginess. Since AOL bought Weblogs Inc I feel it has started to lose that editorial bite it once had. The posts on blogs like TUAW and others have been very informative, but extremely safe. Jason's blog and Engadget are the key standouts. (Note, this is not about singling out anyone blog but looking at the tone of the network as a whole.)

Meanwhile, Gawker Media, Weblogs Inc's chief rival, has been pushing the edge - which is what I look to a blog media company to do. After all, if they don't they're simply using blog technology to replicate traditional media. It's the editorial sizzle here that makes the blog steak sell.

Consider Valleywag, for example. The tech gossip blog, operated by Gawker Media, has been on fire since it launched. It could never have come out of AOL. It's too edgy for them and therefore too risky because it could alienate deep-pocketed tech advertisers. Even though some of that has been toned down a bit now that blogger Nick Douglas has moved on, it still has bite.

Weblogs Inc once had a similar editorial tone across all of its blogs. It feels more sanitized under AOL. In the end, the greatest value AOL will get from Weblogs Inc purchase is the Blogsmith publishing platform. The blogs are just too corporate and safe now and I suspect many of the bloggers will leave once they can now that Calacanis is gone.

This is now Gawker Media's game to lose.

:: Later - Reactions from Calacanis, Denton, their bloggers and more

Thursday, November 23, 2006

links for 2006-11-24

Google Tests Shows Blog Results in Web Searches

The Google Operating System blog points to a post by Andy Boyd showing that Google is now highlighting blog results in Web searches, much as they do for news. This is another Google test. I am not seeing this in my results, but it would be great if they released this widely.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

links for 2006-11-23

Pew: 12% Have Listened to a Podcast, But Only 1% Download Daily

A new study by the Pew Internet & American Life Project found that 12% of Internet users have downloaded a podcast  for listening at a future point in time. This is up from the 7% surveyed earlier this year. However, they're not addicted. A scant 1% download podcasts on a typical day. In other words, they're probably not subscribing via RSS, but simply plucking them for later use. Download the fulll report (PDF).

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