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 Monday, September 01, 2003
BottomFeeder
(Freeware) "..is a news aggregator client (RSS and Atom) written in VisualWorks Smalltalk. BottomFeeder runs on Intel Linux, Windows (95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP), Mac OS X, AIX, SGI Irix, Compaq UNIX, HP-UX, and Solaris."
[Der Schockwellenreiter
1:27:24 PM      comment []   trackback []  



First Draft
Today I found another source of experienced opinion on the changing face of print communications -- Tim Porter, a fellow traveler into the future of print.
From his web page bio:
"I am an editor and writer who entered newspapering as a reporter with a typewriter and left it as an editor building websites. Today, I work independently but retain a passion for newspapers and the pursuit of quality journalism."

The website he built belonged to the San Francisco Examiner, and he was formerly the city editor there as well.

Porter's weblog, First Draft, chronicles the triumphs and travails of the newspaper industry. Newspapers -- like their ailing sisters in the printing industry -- are another industrial-age giant trying desperately to cope with a geriatric future. Their road into the future of print won't be easy, but for a lot of reasons they'll figure out how to survive. It just may not look anything like it does today. And the lessons they learn may be important to all of us.

[b.cognosco
1:22:18 PM      comment []   trackback []  



EFF RSS Feeds
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has RSS feeds that you might find interesting. Action Alerts, Media Releases, a Monthly Events Calendar plus other feeds are available through the EFF. Check them out today....
[Lockergnome's RSS Resource
12:53:52 PM      comment []   trackback []  



How to Organize Feeds
Via Paolo Valdemarin: "When publishing on a weblog or any other kind of site, authors could define their posts as part of a "channel", such as technology, politics, etc. Newsreaders able to parse this kind of information could provide users with additional tools to organize what they read. A shared taxonomy to define categories would make this process much more useful to the user."...
[Lockergnome's RSS Resource
12:52:09 PM      comment []   trackback []  



Microcontent Wiki
I guess Richard means that there should be a way to subscribe to a post and all its comments and TrackBacks! Agreed!

"Weblogs and Wikis are authoring tools that enable everyday people to write to the Web. However one part of the Writeable Web is often overlooked: weblog comments. Often some of the best nuggets of content can be found buried in a comment attached to a weblog post. I've even coined a phrase for this: Microcontent Wiki, which is defined as: Weblog Post Comments. It's microcontent because it's usually content based around a single theme or topic (defined by the weblog post). And it's like a Wiki because anyone can write a comment on a weblog, so it has a similar collaborative feel to a Wiki. The problem is, currently we don't have an easy way to track Microcontent Wikis. We can subscribe to RSS feeds for weblogs and even topics (k-collector), but weblog comments aren't as simple to aggregate."
(via Read/Write Web) [Roland Tanglao's Weblog
12:40:48 PM      comment []   trackback []  



The Spanish Feedster
And why Feedster might be the Google rival to watch.
[Blogalization Community
2:41:14 AM      comment []   trackback []