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: 2013-03-15 09:52 am (UTC)There's no way to mass unsubscribe (that I could find) - you need to go in to each individual entry and change the settings. It was easier to simply delete all of them, but even there it required two clicks per blog, and then several refreshes each time the page/JSON/AJAX/whatever shiny tech they were using got confused by my rapid clicking and decided I was subscribed to a negative number of entries.