Really Useful Syndication

In a world where all of us suffer from information overload to some extent, the ability to pick and choose the articles that we find interesting and have them delivered directly to us surely has to be a useful service. That’s what RSS does. RSS is a wonderful thing, but I know many people who still don’t use it.

RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is a means of subscribing to a webpage, or a blog, or blog comments, or a podcast, or a series of news articles – pretty much anything really – and then every time something on that site changes, a piece of software called a feedreader collects and collates all those changes into one place. You subscribe to whatever you like. It’s a little like designing your very own personal newspaper that contains only the articles that interest you.

If you think about it a bit like an old style message board or web forum where you have new messages delivered to you via email, RSS is a similar idea. Under these old style systems, you become a member of those forums or discussions that interest you, and as new messages get posted they are sent to you via email. RSS is a similar concept, except the stuff that gets fed to you can come from virtually any source, and the software that delivers it is not your email, but a feedreader. (Some newer email and browser apps now have the feedreader function built right in so you can track everything from one convenient place. It makes a lot of sense.) RSS is the technology which let’s you track your favourite blogs and its also what enables iTunes to keep track of your subscribed podcasts. RSS is way cool.

I can’t imagine manually checking every blog or podcast that interests me just to see if it has been updated. For a start, there are just way too many of them. It would annoy and frustrate me browsing through some long list of sites that I need to check each day, only to find that many have not actually changed since I last looked. Obviously, if it hasn’t changed, I don’t need to check it. Equally, it would become tedious having to individually look through each one that has been updated in order to find out whether there is anything there that grabs my attention. I simply don’t have time for that.

When I did a classroom blogging project last year I used RSS to create a feed for every student in my class. Each time one of them posted anything, I would know instantly. I think it used to surprise them just how quickly I would know whenever any of them would post something to their blog. Quite literally, they would write something and normally within a minute or so I would say, “hey, nice post!” I’m sure it made them feel more accountable. They knew I read everything they wrote. Everything. Without RSS there is no way I could have stayed on top of it like that.

Until recently, my feedreader of choice has been Vienna. Light, simple and free, Vienna does a great job of managing feeds for all sorts of things from blogs to wikis to podcasts to photostreams. It has some very nice, very Mac-like features, such as Smart Folders, which make it super easy to track the stuff I care about. At the moment my Vienna is tracking about 80 or so blogs that I follow regularly.

Since I switched to Flock as my favourite browser, I’ve also become quite enamoured with the browser’s built in RSS reader. I really like the layout of the news pages and the way it manages the presentation of each feed. Updated feeds appear in bold, with a number in brackets indicating the number of new posts, and the main reading page presents a neat intro paragraph for each article which you can click on to expand or mark as read. Of course, the layout is very customisable, so you can view it however suits you. It’s very cool and hints that EPIC may be closer than we think…

There are a bunch of other feedreaders that are supposed to be quite good. NetNewsWire has a good reputation, although it’s not free. Apple’s own web browser, Safari, does a pretty fair job of managing RSS feeds although I don’t think I’d use it for managing a large number of subscriptions. I’m not too certain what to recommend on the Windows platform, but I’m quite sure a quick Google search will turn up something useful.  And of course, if you want to really be a cool Web 2.0 dude, you can use one of the excellent web based ones like Bloglines or Google Reader.

Area there any downsides of RSS feeds? There are two that strike me…

One… even with RSS doing all the hard work of tracking your favourite blogs you can still get an overwhelming amount of stuff coming to you each day. I know people that subscribe to hundreds of feeds and you can be back in information overload territory again pretty quickly if you’re not careful, but at least you’re overloading on information of your own choice. Of course, you don’t have to actually read every single article that comes into your feed, just as you don’t have to read every single article in the Sunday newspaper (remember those?) Just read what grabs your attention. Browse. Skim. It’s ok. Don’t feel guilty.

Two… you only subscribe to the feeds that interest you. While that is supposed to be seen as a positive, you can also easily fall into the trap of only following stories about which you have a current interest and therefore exclude yourself from other stories that you may be interested in, only you just don’t know it yet. You don’t know what you don’t know, as they say. Classic example… last weekend I knew all about the iPhone launch and new Skype features for the Mac, but never knew a bomb went off in London. Gotta be careful you don’t subscribe yourself into a very small niche sometimes…

But if you’re a teacher, there are some excellent Educational Blogs out there that are well worth a look… read some Warlick, Richardson, Fisch and Fryer. Get some Aussie input from Pearce, Bruce and O’Connell. Round it out with a bit of Peters and Cofino. (You’re already reading mine, so hey, thanks!)

So there you go… RSS Feeds. Have at them! It you aren’t an RSS kinda guy or gal, give it a try… you might just like it.

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Are you an Educator? Do You Blog?

If so, please take 30 seconds to fill in this very short survey. (It’s three questions!)

Dr Scott McLeod from the University of Minnessota is trying to get an idea of just how big the education blogosphere (there’s that word again!) really is.  So, please help him out a bit and fill in his three questions.  Thanks!  🙂

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It’s a Blogosphere. Get over it.

Found this article in a news link the other day. It seems that the growing list of terminology surrounding the “new web” (can I call it that?) is getting up some people’s noses…

“Blog”, “netiquette”, “cookie” and “wiki” have been voted among the most irritating words spawned by the Internet, according to the results of a poll published on Thursday. Topping the list of words most likely to make web users “wince, shudder or want to bang your head on the keyboard” was folksonomy, a term for a web classification system. “Blogosphere”, the collective name for blogs or online journals, was second; “blog” itself was third; “netiquette”, or internet etiquette, came fourth and “blook”, a book based on a blog, was fifth. “Cookie”, a file sent to a user’s computer after they visit a website, came in ninth, while “wiki”, a collaborative website edited by its readers, was tenth.

I must say that I quite like the term “blogosphere”, although to be fair it didn’t make much sense to me until I became a blogger myself. However, I think it describes the blogging ecosystem rather well. It is amazing the way that we who write blogs all seem to become interlinked together… My friend Simon was telling me that when I published a podcast recently about his Flat Planet Project, the site hits on his wiki spiked into the hundreds over the next few days. It really is a very connected world.

Whenever I talk to teachers about blogging with their students, the usual first questions are “How will anyone ever find what we wrote?”, and “Why would anyone read what we write?” These are obvious questions, but to ask them is a great underestimation of just how big the Internet really is and the curiousity levels of the people who use it. I don’t really know how people find it, and why they read it. But I know they will and they do. I can’t explain how and why, but I know it works. If you build it, they will come.

One of the very first posts I ever wrote on this blog was about the nature of blogging as I naively understood it at the time. One of the things I wrote back then (that I now understand with much greater appreciation) is this…

…the true worth of blogging cannot be appreciated on a small scale. A single blog post, or even a single blog, is not what it’s all about. Blogging gets it’s power from becoming a large scale ecosystem, a thriving community of people all cross linking to each other, creating connections and networks of ideas. The power of blogging is way more than the sum of its individual parts, and to gauge the power of this new medium it needs to be seen in the light of the much bigger picture that it creates.

To me, the word “blogosphere” works well to describe that concept of connectedness between bloggers. I cannot think of a better pre-Web2.0 word to describe the same thing. Besides, I’m told that Shakespeare invented many words and phrases that did not exist before he dreamed them up… If he was trying to express an idea and there was not a readymade word to adequately say it, he just made one up. In fact, he made about 1700 of them up, according to one source I looked at.

The funny thing about that early post I wrote was that it was written in response to a book I read about blogging called “Who Let the Blogs out” by a fellow called Biz Stone, (Biz was behind things like Xanga, Odeo and Twitter). Within a week or so of me posting it, I stumbled across a response on Biz’s blog where he was commenting on my blogpost which was originally commenting on his book. As a beginning blogger, it was at that point that I realised just how truly interconnected we all are through this “blogosphere” thing.

So, like it or not, Blogosphere it is.

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