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Thursday, September 29, 2005
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Jon Udell's article, A channel changer for the Bloglines river of news, may have a title that only a dedicated Really Simple Syndication (RSS) user could love... but it made me nostalgic for the first time I ever saw news scrolling up a computer screen. That was more than 25 years ago, the day The Hartford Courant
unplugged my typewriter and replaced it with an Atex editing terminal.
That event changed my life, leading me to a software industry job, some
magazine writing, and what feels like about 20 years of grad school to
keep up with communication technology.
Early-Atex nostalgia: The
keyboard was huge, with a handy row of keys labelled "Save/Get" for
what we now call "cut & paste," another bunch of function keys on
the side, and a screen with bright letters glowing against a dark
background. At first, we called it a "CRT," for "cathode ray
tube," not a "monitor." Ten years later I worked for a magazine editor
who still called our computers "tubes." (They were Macintoshes.)
Even more than Atex's Save/Gets, I immediately fell in love with two things:
- Using the delete key (which ended my 10 years of thypxxxx typing rows of x's to "erase" my typsxxx mistakes), and
- Reading the newswires, which up until then were only available as
dot-matrix printouts unspooling from the teletype machines that rattled
away in the glass room behind the copydesk.
Most of the wire service stories the average reporter saw came as ripped-off lengths of teletype paper an editor might leave on your desk with "AP got this story, why didn't you?" scrawled on top.
Instead, Atex put all of the Courant's newswires right in front of me, as reading material. I
could scroll through headlines from the Associated Press, UPI, the New
York Times wire, the LA Times wire, plus a dozen other services and
syndicates, sort them by time received, and scan the newest first -- something Dave Winer and Jon Udell refer to as
the "river of news."
There was more: With one keystroke,
I could expand the list, replacing the headlines with the first
paragraph of each story. I think I could set that scrolling
list to show however much of each story I wanted. (With no Atex manual
handy,
I'm doing this from memory.) I'd like to be able to do that today, but
most of the news RSS feeds don't go beyond the headline and
summary. However, lots of blogs, including this one, feed their
full contents, so an expand/contract feature might be useful in the
next generation of news aggregators. (The aggregator would still
download the full contents of each blog post, but the user would decide
how much of each one should scroll by as part of that broad and deep
stream of text.)
So... back in 1980 I was already spoiled by having not only a "river of
news," but a river that could be instantly sampled at various
depths. When I had opened story to read the whole thing, I
could split the screen, pushing that story into a left column, scroll
through more headlines on the right, then pick one for a side-by-side
comparison. Later, as an editor, I could even copy and paste paragraphs from
one column to the other -- to create a "combined wires"
story. (When I bought my first "personal computer" a few years later, I
was disappointed to discover that most programs had no built-in "split
screen" function.)
Back to the "river of news":
What Jon's article points out is that a combination of RSS feeds and
the right "news aggregator" program can recreate something like that
1978 Atex scrolling column of news summaries, topping the list with a
story from the Times, the BBC, CNN or the Knoxville News Sentinel, or
Dave's Scripting News -- the most recently updated feed you subscribe to.
Jon explains how to accomplish that with Bloglines.com,
a free online feed reader, shifting it from its folders-and-panes,
e-mail-like display to a single column of news. He mentions Dave's
program, Radio Userland, which includes a one-column news aggregator, as well as a full blog-publishing system. (The one I'm using right now, in fact.)
The only other news aggregator I've seen that sticks to the "river of
news" format hasn't been updated in a year or two. However, it still
works, and it's free (or "donationware"). Don't mind its odd name: "Amphetadesk."
I recently discovered that the program is so small and self-contained
that I can store it on a keychain flash drive and demonstrate it on any
computer in any classroom I'm teaching in. In fact, I can store both
the Macintosh and Windows versions. (I have to test this idea some
more. As they say, "your mileage may vary.")
There are plenty of RSS aggregators out there
that follow the folders-and-panes e-mail layout, but the older
one-column style may be a better tool for news junkies who like the
"latest stories first" idea, rather than the source-by-source approach
-- which, come to think of it, is a lot like that old glass-walled room
full of separate teletypes, one for each wire service.
I tried Bloglines last year, but I haven't used it in a while, and it
looks like it will take me another visit to follow Jon's
instructions for its "river of news" mode. They involve something
called a "doLoadAll function" in an "n Updated Feeds link,"
neither of which jumped out of the screen at me on the quick visit that
preceded this wave of Atex nostalgia. Maybe this weekend, I'll
get back to Jon's Radio for another try.
4:49:00 PM
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© Copyright
2008
Bob Stepno.
Last update:
7/19/08; 1:09:19 PM.
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