Home » Tag: rss

August 26th, 2009

Categories: Social media

With the rise of Twitter and social networking news streams, many techies have been debating the value and livelihood of RSS. RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, is a common format used to share a constant stream of articles. Popularized by blogs, RSS can be imported by RSS readers (like Google Reader; here’s my little guide to them).

Back in May, TechCrunch already pronounced RSS dead which makes it more shocking that today, again, Sam Diaz reveals he’s not using RSS anymore. And so the conversation begins. Marshall Kirkpatrick defends RSS as another of his many research tools while Robert Scoble has moved on to Twitter and FriendFeed for news.

Let’s not confuse death with evolution. RSS has always been a tool, a tool still used by, shockingly Twitter, Facebook, and Friendfeed.  While some find basic RSS readers less valuable, this is because innovators have found ways to make finding information on the web more useful and more valuable.  New tools like Feedly and LazyFeed are making RSS more valuable, and in some cases, unrecognizable from its original state. The internet is, obviously, moving so quickly (just watch Twitter update), that it’s impossible to believe the same tools we use today will be the same tools used next year. Nothing disappears, it evolves into something better.

Of course, I still love my RSS Reader.

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June 3rd, 2008

Categories: Business models, News industry

The most talked about new web 2.0 sites, from Facebook to Twitter, are facing business model challenges. Scott Karp points out the challenge of print advertising online while Alexander van Elsas goes farther in his post “Advertisement holds web 2.0 in a death grip.”

Web 2.0 has focused on free services - free services that build virally fast and then, hopefully lead to a business model when the venture capitalists get impatient. But banner ads and tier subscriptions aren’t enough.

Advertising, as Karp and van Elsas point out, isn’t useful. Google pioneered ads that use your search terms so they are relevant and unobtrusive, whereas the only thing Facebook can sell me are gay dating sites (Google advertises better ones). The challenge isn’t simply advertising isn’t working, but that you can’t charge people for your services.

Most web services offer a paid option with valuable features. Remember the Milk charges $25 a year just to sync my tasks to my phone. Yahoo Mail wants another $20 to give my email portability. Each service doesn’t cost too much, but add them up, and suddenly the internet got expensive.

Bernard Lunn says social networking “is at a major fork in the road” (leading to web 3.0?) where they have to choose between walled gardened, open APIs, or mix. All the free on the web will need a business model, and every site from social to content providers will find charging customers harder and harder and advertising spread thinner and thinner.

Google’s strength came from reinventing advertising to its strength - search - creating a unique model that let companies and individuals advertise without upfront costs. Amazon and eBay have built retail businesses that couldn’t exist in brick and mortar stores. Most other sites have relied on 7-8 figure buyouts to make money.

Other websites will need to find new business models. Some ideas like market research and statistics, like I discussed for Facebook and other social networks, make excellent use of their large user bases, but will lead to a decrease in value when every social site starts offering this research. Further, with open source and APIs all the rage, regular pageviews will become less reliable as people use services how they want, not how the websites want them to. For example, advertising will work even less for content providers once RSS readers takeover the mainstream.

This is a lot of doomsaying without many solutions. I think sponsorships and product placement has potential, but again, it’s going to be impossible to control users. The best business models thus far have been enterprise level customer service, best seen in companies like Red Hat which provides customized Linux solutions and and MySQL’s Enterprise Unlimited. Companies will pay for customized services and research which individuals have no use for. Less than one percent of MySQL’s customers pay, but that was enough for Sun to pay $1 billion to buy the company.

The focus over the next few years needs to be on developing new and hopefully revolutionary business models that recognize the internet, software, and content want to be free (yes, even music and movies). The old business models required payment, but the future doesn’t have to be constrained by old-fashioned thinking. Think outside the tubes.

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May 15th, 2008

Categories: Geek Chic

For the second week of organizing your geek life, I’m tackling RSS Readers after last week’s look at personalized homepages.  These helpful aggregators of all you love and enjoy can quickly become and overbearing chore.  You want to read everything, but all these damn bloggers just write too damn much (sorry).  I subscribe to more than 200 feeds, flooding me with posts by the minute and leaving great, but infrequent bloggers lost in the shuffle.  Here are some pointers on controlling the insanity.

The struggle with RSS readers is how to stay informed but also have fun - don’t stress about unread items and such.  The problem is I don’t want to have to mark each feed read, but I also don’t just want to mark everything read.  This is why organizing feeds by topic becomes unwieldy - it doesn’t prioritize reading.

The other challenge is preparing my reader for ideal mobile viewing.  I don’t want any partial feeds or aggregating sites like Digg.  This led to my somewhat complex tagging system that you can of course tweak as needed.

(more…)

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