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  • The Big Lebowski (Limited Edition) [Blu-ray Book + Digital Copy]
    The Big Lebowski (Limited Edition) [Blu-ray Book + Digital Copy]
    starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman
  • The Big Lebowski (Widescreen Collector's Edition)
    The Big Lebowski (Widescreen Collector's Edition)
    starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore, Steve Buscemi, David Huddleston
  • The Big Lebowski - 10th Anniversary Limited Edition
    The Big Lebowski - 10th Anniversary Limited Edition
    starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore, Steve Buscemi, David Huddleston
Monday
Oct202008

RSS Adoption at 11% and it May Be Peaking, Forrester Says

Forrester Research today published a new report on the state of RSS. In short, while there are bright spots, it does not paint the picture of a technology that's going mainstream anytime soon.

On a positive note, the resarch entitled What's Holding RSS Back?, says that nearly half of marketers have moved to add feeds to their web sites. Further, RSS adoption among consumers is at 11% up from just 2% of users three years ago. RSS feeds usage is more dominant among men.

Here's the kicker, though. That might be all she wrote for RSS' growth track.

According to the research, of the 89% of those who don't use feeds only 17% say they're interested in using them. In fact Forrester spends much of the report helping marketers better explain the benefits of RSS to their customers. "Unless marketers make a move to hook them — and try to convert
their apathetic counterparts — RSS will never be more than a niche
technology," the analysts (who include Jeremiah Owyang) wrote.

Lord knows, as someone who spends three hours a day in Google Reader, I am a giant evangelist for RSS. But I am also a realist. Feeds are way way too geeky for most and the benefit does not outweigh the learning curve. So I think RSS has peaked.

Still, while feed adoption may have crested the idea of online opt-in communications is just getting going. The Facebook newsfeed, Twitter and Friendfeed are perfect examples of opt-in vehichles that bring content you care about to you. In each case, you're total in control. You can unsubscribe from individuals or groups and tailor the stream so that what you want finds you.

RSS is only one form of opt-in communications. The potential is bigger when you look more broadly to social networking. This larger promise still holds and as the technologies become more invisible the newsfeed could even one day subsume RSS.

Monday
Oct202008

All Your Sites Belong to Us

Three major web site redesigns in the last several weeks - Facebook, iGoogle and Yahoo - have sparked outrage from a small but influential group of users. ReadWriteWeb breaks each of these down. As I read their account it occurred to me that a dramatic shift has occurred. Companies don't really own their web sites anymore. We do.

Time Magazine with its Person of the Year cover story decried 2006 as the year of You, the empowered consumer. At the time they wrote...

And for seizing the reins of the global media, for founding and framing the new digital democracy, for working for nothing and beating the pros at their own game, TIME's Person of the Year for 2006 is you.

But just two years later, something exceptional has happened. We now "own" the web even more than we did back then when all we simply did was create viable homegrown alternatives to big media sites.

Nowadays, if there's an online experience we dislike, we either demand that it be changed, use Greasemonkey to fix things ourselves or just vote with our feet. That's a major shift from the level of empowerment that we thought was remarkable even just two years ago.

Since the dawn of the decade there have been several major breakdown in systems that we thought were a sure thing. First it was our national security (September 11), then major companies failed (Enron/Worldcom) and finally, more recently, our financial system tanked (Lehman Brothers). The result is our trust in institutions continues to erode. These events might seem detached from a silly web site design, but they're not. Each encouraged people to take greater control of all aspects their lives - and to live to the fullest, even online.

No matter the site, a lot of time and effort goes into building a solid user experience. There's always a chance you're going to alienate 50% of your audience when you go through the process. But in this age - more than ever - the best approach is to redesign web sites collaboratively with consumers and all out in the open so that we really feel like the changes are ours not just yours.

That's preciely what Dell did starting late last year - and it proved smart. Others should take note.

Monday
Oct202008

links for 2008-10-20

Sunday
Oct192008

Build a Real-Time News Ticker with Friendfeed

I have written before about how to use Friendfeed's powerful imaginary friends feature as an aggregator. Now that they have real-time updating and lists, you can actually combine these to build a handy desktop news ticker.

First, create a bunch of imaginary friends for the different news sources you want to follow. Assign each to a relevant Twitter profile. For example, I have three imaginary friends: The New York Times (Twitter), Techmeme Firehose (on Twitter) and Breaking News (on Twitter).

Next, add these to a special Friendfeed list. I rolled them up in a list called News.

Now click on the real-time link on this list page, open the mini window and bingo. You can also bookmark it so that it runs in your Firefox sidebar. Here's the result.

Sunday
Oct192008

links for 2008-10-19