Whether you use Google Reader, NewsGator or BlogLines, the typical interaction with a new feed item is to read it, and then move on, until you hit the next item. Some feed readers, including Google, have let you take things a step further, by sharing your favorites in a shared items link blog.
Recently, Google has made some noise about getting more interactive, through recommending feeds based on your Web history and subscriptions, or show that multiple people with link blogs shared a specific item.
Good. But not good enough. Not nearly enough.
Despite these efforts, I have no idea, for the most part, who my RSS feed suscribers are, and Google Reader doesn't tell me who is reading my shared link blog, what are the most popular shared items, or what my friends are reading. While I'm going through hundreds of feeds a day and almost a thousand items, I am not telling people what I think. I'm not adding comments, and I'm not getting social with others like me reading the same thing. And when I find something on the Web I'd like to share via Google Reader, I can't do it.
Google Reader can't do this...
Google Reader can't do this either...
Today, I got a sneak peek preview of a brand-new application, called AssetBar, set to hit the Web in the next month, which not only lets you read your feeds, and share what you find the most interesting, but lets you select friends based on your interests, lets you share individual items with one or more friends directly, tells you how many times a feed or item has been read, and what others think about it.
The tool even lets you go beyond feeds, offering integration with services including Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, Pownce and more.
Utilizing an extremely scalable database built for this purpose, AssetBar does what Google Reader cannot do. It eliminates duplicate feed items. It shows me what are the most frequently shared feeds and posts. It allows for customization, where Google Reader does not. And it, like Friendfeed, allows me to share items with my friends or all viewers outside of feeds. If I want to share a screenshot of the Apple Web site, I simply click "Share on AssetBar" in my Firefox toolbar, select an image, write a note, and it's off.
There are calls far and wide from the Web for change. Take a look just from the last week's comments in blogs I read:
Kent Newsome says, "Bloglines is still slow and unreliable. I tried hard (for the third time) to use Google Reader, but I can't. I hate Google Reader. In fact, I could write 1000 pages on how much I dislike the interface."
Robert Scoble writes, in "Workaround for Google Reader’s suckage", "I still wish the Google Reader team would do a better job of getting rid of duplicates."
Webomatica says, "Let me just say that I now have nearly 1,500 articles waiting for me on a daily basis. And even as I try to comb through them, more appear as I mark others read. It’s like a fire hose aimed at my head."
AssetBar, while still teething through the development process, offers the most potential to successfully bridge the gap between high-volume RSS feed reading, and social interaction. Come this January, you'll get the opportunity to give it a trial run and see if it just might deliver on the promise of the true Web 2.0, and make RSS not just a passive, solitary sport, but a social, multi-dimensional activity. I bet, that with focused development, and your collective feedback, it can get there. And it just might see me leaving Google Reader behind.
If you want to get your hands dirty and test out a early pre-release version of AssetBar, send me an e-mail, or post a comment here, with your e-mail address, and I'll hook you up. If you don't want to get in on the bleeding edge, stay tuned here, and visit the AssetBar Web log. We will both keep you posted.
You forgot to mention fav.or.it in the mix (http://fav.or.it) - no duplicates, sliced feeds, in-line commenting (which go back to original blog), sharable slices, attention tracking, and much much more.
ReplyDeleteNick, I did see Robert Scoble's comments on Favor.it recently, but I've never used the service, and my Feedburner stats don't show any of my readers using it. That's why it wasn't included in this piece. It sounds good, but it's sometimes hard to be 100% inclusive.
ReplyDeleteHey Louis, this sounds very cool, I'd love to try it out.
ReplyDeletemariorz[at]gmail
cheers!
Louis, thanks for the favorable review.
ReplyDeleteWe're going to bring our first cluster online Monday/Tues and hope to open the PRE-release to anyone with an OPML file a few days after that.
Nick: fav.or.it looks cool too. Love to swap invites! Maybe we can learn from each other.
Mario: I love feedheads too.
For social reading to work, let's all move forward together!
Israel [from] assetbar
Sound great - cant wait to try it. Please send an invite to JMaultasch (at) gmail.com
ReplyDeleteI would love to try it out (tom@tomrafteryit.net). Thanks.
ReplyDeleteAs Israel noted, even more improvements are coming to AssetBar early next week. So, in deference to their efforts, we'll be sending our invites after that transition takes place. If you haven't gotten your invite yet, please sit tight, and I'll pass them through as soon as it makes sense. And if you haven't made a request for one yet, what are you waiting for?
ReplyDeleteThere is also the EasyByte Ticker which here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.easybyte.com/products/ticker.html
it can do keyword search onto the
various only sites sites as bloglines, google etc... and you get teh results very quickly, and as its not a website, it always running (hidden usually) so no need to start up a web browser.
Sounds really interesting. I've been using Feedeachother for a while and found it a far more social experience, but I think fav.or.it and Assetbar will both be on the list of new sites to try...
ReplyDeleteHey Louis,
ReplyDeleteWe wrote a similar article you might want to check out. Plus we're trying to get as many people to comment links to their Google Shared Items so we can have a more complete list of what's out there. We've already added yours, but if you have more, please link them here:
http://www.techtalk4u.com/index.php/2007/12/16/tips-to-help-you-consolidate-and-share-your-rss/
Sounds promising, but none of the previous ones made me leave google reader. Let's see if yours does.
ReplyDeleteshvelmur@gmail.com/ http://shvelmur.com
Nice one, Louis!
ReplyDeleteHaving read through AssetBar's site, I'm looking forward to exploring this all the more.
Certainly sounds like it'll revolutionise my reading habits.
Now, make my day and tell me there's a beautiful mobile-optimised version?
Or maybe just an 'output' feed?
I thought the idea is really compelling, but it was really slow because of the Javascript. Took up 40% of my processor for that site alone.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the invite.
http://patrick.veverka.net/2008/01/28/the-future-is-still-hazy/
Hi Louis,
ReplyDeleteI would really like to try assetbar. Can you send me an invite ?
andre[at]adegga.com
Andre
:: www.adegga.com
:: blog.delaranja.com
I want to try it
ReplyDeletegtokio at gmail.com
http://friendfeed.com/gtokio
Thanks for the invite Louis.
ReplyDeletethis is definitely the future lou, and i'd love to give it a go. GR will be over for me if this is as good as it looks.
ReplyDeleteitspardo |at| gmail
thanks in advance and good luck!
I would like to try it. Thanks. fpettit[at]gmail
ReplyDelete