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I don't read AKMA regularly, so tonight was the first time I noticed on his site a link to Aaron Swartz's Syndicate Your Page service. I've always pointed folks to Voidstar's RSSify site, not knowing there was more than one out there. I'm following an RSS trail outbound from Aaron's site, starting David Carter-Tod's Wytheville News Service. This is another piece of the puzzle I've been missing - how to display a feed in a regular web page, so I'm thrilled to find that someone is providing this service. Is there a Perl script (or something besides ASP) I can run that would do something similar? Aaron also maintains RSS Info, which provides information about Readers, Feeds, Tools, and Resources. Hey Andy, check out XML::RSS ("a Perl module to read and write RSS files") for our future project proposals for INAC and our other project ideas! Use the blog, Luke
Although I've already referenced it a couple of times, I finally had a chance to sit down and really read through Steven Johnson's article, and I think we'll look back on it and see it had some seminal ideas that helped articulate a new phase for blogging. I like his vision but as I read the article, I couldn't help thinking that RSS news aggregators are already providing some small portion of this functionality. For example, take the following idea he expressed:
My news aggregator is bringing the front doors of 136 sites to me every hour. Granted, it's still based on time and I don't think there is any aggregator software yet that is deliberately providing subject or URL cross-references yet, but it might be a good starting point. I've chosen far more than the 20 "guardian bloggers" that Steven proposes in his article, and I think most people that have found the aggregator & blog loop are subscribing to more than 20 sites. (This would be an interesting survey to undertake!) If I could keep a massive database of the URLs, comments, and ideas running through my aggregator every day, that might be a foundation for Steven's idea. A search could run against that database first since I've specified those are the guardians of information that I trust the most. If I want further information, then it could run against the wider database Steven proposes. I guess my question is if some of the building blocks are already falling into place. Backlinks could definitely be one building block, while personal aggregators might be another. And I still think the blogging tools can build simple fill-in-the-blank forms for general meta data about a site's subjects. It wouldn't be granular enough to help with the topical posts Steven wants to link together, but it would help organize and cross-reference the guardians. If you haven't already read this article, please make sure you do. I think I'll be referring to it quite a bit in my future presentations.
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Blogroll (Sites I Read in My Aggregator) Mobile Blogroll (Sites I Read on My Treo 600) Spreading the meme: Why You Should Fall to Your Knees and Worship a Librarian Unabridged: |
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