It would try the patience of angels
Mar. 14th, 2013 09:18 amNever mind all this popery. The big news of the day is that Google is retiring Google Reader in July.
I use Google Reader, and am thus disappointed. On the plus side, with that gone, I'll have no reason to be signed into my Google account most of the time. I do use Google Docs, but that tends to be an infrequent sign-in-use-sign-out business. And anything which takes me one step away from Google's Giant Data Extraction Vortex is probably a good thing.
I'm lightly surprised, though. Apparently usage of Google Reader is declining. I'm not sure if this is indicative of better software being out there, or of a general decline in RSS use. Maybe all the cool kids use Facetweet as aggregators these days?
So, ladies and gentlemen of LJ, how should I read my RSS feeds in the future?
[Poll #1901989]
(Ars Technica is running a poll on "where should we go instead?", and they probably have a slightly bigger readership than I do. They're also better informed about the large number of RSS readers which rely on Google Reader to work.)
I use Google Reader, and am thus disappointed. On the plus side, with that gone, I'll have no reason to be signed into my Google account most of the time. I do use Google Docs, but that tends to be an infrequent sign-in-use-sign-out business. And anything which takes me one step away from Google's Giant Data Extraction Vortex is probably a good thing.
I'm lightly surprised, though. Apparently usage of Google Reader is declining. I'm not sure if this is indicative of better software being out there, or of a general decline in RSS use. Maybe all the cool kids use Facetweet as aggregators these days?
So, ladies and gentlemen of LJ, how should I read my RSS feeds in the future?
[Poll #1901989]
(Ars Technica is running a poll on "where should we go instead?", and they probably have a slightly bigger readership than I do. They're also better informed about the large number of RSS readers which rely on Google Reader to work.)
no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 01:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 01:08 pm (UTC)Google Reader shows me the summary, and looking at the summary doesn't affect the readness. Once you've opened the full article, it gets auto-marked as read, but is trivial to tell it "keep as unread" if you want to come back later. (There is also a concept of "starring" articles to mark them as come-back-to-later, but I use that for something different.)
I guess I've devised this strategy because it's how Google Reader works, which means it's kind of defined my requirements :-\
no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 01:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 01:39 pm (UTC)(Historically they've been quite clueful, but being taken over by Oracle doesn't seem to have done them any good at all.)
no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 01:43 pm (UTC)Oh... oh no! I'm very sorry. :-(
no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 02:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-03-14 02:52 pm (UTC)