Comments on: The looming crisis: Personal syndication overload
Four publishing tools, three blogs, six microblogs, and two aggregators. It's enough to drive a guy insane.
Four publishing tools, three blogs, six microblogs, and two aggregators. It's enough to drive a guy insane.
Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.
Add this feed to your online news reader
Raw photos are a hassle compared to JPEG. But if you like photography, the list of their image quality advantages is long and getting longer.
Although Redmond's foray into retail bears a big resemblance to Apple's approach, Microsoft has added some distinctive features to draw casual PC buyers and techies alike.
Maybe what we all really need is a break.
I feel your pain... Prediction...In 12 months, your entire social network will start traveling around the web with you within your browser. This will of course include, updating once = updating everywhere. We are only just starting to experience this with recent initiatives such as open social, Friendfeed and now Facebook with their Facebook connect initiative.
www.twitter.com/A_F
A daily, weekly, or even monthly digest is often far superior than a Web 2.0 content feed (like Twitter) in terms of judicious editorial pruning and e-mail filters can perform the triage automatically.
if everybody is flocking to the aggregator you want, then these startups will go belly up. The VCs, having done so much due diligence and are convinced enough to think the 'islands of services' model is exactly what consumers want, will lose their investment.
And the Web 2.0 myth will finally be busted.
That's not going to be pretty.
But you know what - as a consumer, I want all the various islands of services to be integrated in one simple to manage interface that I can use wherever I am.
So. Death to silos, walled gardens, islands of services. That's the end of Web 2.0
For me, there were a lot more nodes in my graph, so I used GraphViz to create the image.
You can read the post and see the different images here:
http://www.orient-lodge.com/node/3135
My expectation is that things will consolidate. Microblogging services will interconnect, the way email services and to a lesser extent IM services have. Sites like FriendFeed, Profilactic, SecondBrain and so on will get smarter at aggregating and deduping messages.
The part that I'm most interested in is when aggregators start supporting groups or tags, so I can simply find all the deduped social media for friends that I tag in one group or another.
Someone has to do that soon enough.
Aldon
it's been here for a year or two, if not much more.
the interesting question is if the younger generation, fondly referred to as the (brain dead) icq/cellular/myspace/some other kind of... generation can really control the info explosion
or are we just wrongly attributing them some kind of media super powers
why?
why do you guys feel the need to be everywhere at once?
the good lord and a guy in an a8 (i hope i'm not mixing things up here) gave you guys the gift of RSS. use it!
whats wrong with sticking to one or maybe two services and aggregating the posts/images/younameit to the rest?
what the hell is twitter good for if not for that?
i do write for different websites. But as a programmer i have designed my webapp to manage all this. Very simple . It is like AP manage their stories just write and tell where it belongs. So it doesnt have to be like that internet is a bunch of places. Just do organize yourself and in that way you will help to organize Internet.
It gets worse, I may go from a bar on Sunset Blvd to Rodeo Drive -- because a friend called to say "all the action was there," only to find out when I got to Rodeo -- "all of the action" had moved to Sunset !
And I never know where the action will take hold. Since I'm most active at Spago, Mirabelle, Redrock, SkyBar and Dan Tana's, I check those bars more frequently. But what if a new bar opens.
It's so horrible.
she makes sure I'm too tired to go bar hopping.
the most i can do to get wasted is "call of duty 4". those little brats waste me the second I hit the server
http://everwas.com/2008/04/the-lifestream-filter-will-be-the-next-great-algorithm-war.html
I don't think, like rocjoe two comments above does, that loops will be causing DOS attack. Well thought out web services post just the changes since last update. Therefor periodic probes are processed relatively quickly, with no much load on the servers.
- by DorianBenkoil September 21, 2008 9:55 AM PDT
- And this is why we all leave a trail through the Internet of partial pieces of us ... can you even remember all the feeds, blogs, etc. you've created. On the aggregation note: I wish I could log into Disqus and didn't have to log onto CNET's network to comment here.
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