Why Google Is Wrong to Kill Off Google Reader
Google Reader was one of the last vestiges of the Internet where you could avoid all the 'friend-ing' and focus purely on content sharing. Of course, you had likes, sharing, and following friends but that was never primary goal of the service. Any communication you had with your 'friends' was focused on the content you shared.
Internet
RSS
Google
Reading
fave
pb
october 2011 by patrix
For one thing, Reader is only sort of a social network. In many senses it’s an anti-social network. Not in the sense that people in Reader are anti-social so much as the point is to harbor a small enclave of carefully selected people and create a safe-haven of sorts where that “carefully constructed human curated” list of shares and insights can flourish. In Reader, you don’t go after as many friends as possible. You certainly don’t see anyone from high school. Nobody shares photos of their kids. The discussions that do blossom are almost always very smart and focused. It’s the internet if the world were a more prefect place.
Google Reader was one of the last vestiges of the Internet where you could avoid all the 'friend-ing' and focus purely on content sharing. Of course, you had likes, sharing, and following friends but that was never primary goal of the service. Any communication you had with your 'friends' was focused on the content you shared.
october 2011 by patrix
‘If this then that’: ten recipes for journalists
october 2011 by patrix
If this then that – or ifttt – is a tool that allows you to connect various other tools together to create rules or tasks. It allows you to connect 17 channels, including SMS, Facebook, WordPress and Dropbox, offering 1040 possible task combinations.
The most popular ‘recipe’, a task designed and shared by others, will give you an idea of how ifttt works. This recipe allows you to connect your Facebook and Dropbox accounts so that when someone tags you in a photo on Facebook, the photo will be added to your Dropbox folder (cloud storage allowing you to access your files on different devices).
Here are ten ifttt recipes for journalists:
1. When you receive an email from a key contact or your editor, you receive an SMS
You no doubt receive scores of emails but there are some senders that are more important to hear from than others. This recipe allows you to set up a key contact, such as a source or your editor, and receive a SMS whenever that person emails you.
2. When you post a link to Delicious, add to Dropbox
If you use Delicious to bookmark interesting stories, this recipe allows you to also save the links to Dropbox. For example, I am interested in new smartphone apps so have set up a connection so that any Delicious bookmark that I tag “app” is posted to a folder in my Dropbox account.
3. Post Google+ posts to your Facebook page
Google+ adds additional responsibility for anyone in the newsroom tasked with managing social media.
It is widely recognised that non-automated posts are best when it comes to Facebook and Google+. This recipe allows you to write a link post in Google+ and automatically post the link to your site’s Facebook page. You can also create a rule to post status updates.
To do this you need to set up an RSS feed of your Google+ account. Copy your Google+ ID, which is the long number in the URL of your Google+ profile, and paste it on the end of http://plu.sr/feed.php?plusr=. My Google+ feed is therefore http://plu.sr/feed.php?plusr=107031542976965456407, for example.
4. Create an Evernote every time you star an item in Google Reader
If you use Google Reader as your RSS feed reader and want a quick way of saving key articles to Evernote, this is a solution.
5. Post to Instapaper (or Read It Later) every time you star an article in Google Reader
If you use Instapaper to read articles later this is a quick way of posting from Google Reader.
6. Post a ‘favourite’ tweet (with links) to Instapaper (or Dropbox or Evernote)
When you come across a tweet with a link and want to save it for later you may well click star to make it a favourite. This recipe allows you to save those favourite tweets and post the linked articles to Instapaper. Alternatively, you can also set this up to save to Dropbox of Evernote.
7. Add favourite Flickr photos to Dropbox
If you post stories you write online, you may well use Flickr images with creative commons licences. Flickr allows you to indicate favourite images that you come across and may want to use at a later date. This recipe saves those images to Dropbox. Alternatively, you can set this up to save favourites to Evernote.
8. Send me an email (or SMS) to remind me about a daily meeting, weekly or monthly task.
If you have a daily or weekly meeting or task to carry out, ifttt can enable you to create reminder.
9. Send me an email (or SMS) every time a certain person tweets
Twitter is a great source for journalists but it is easy to miss a tweet from a key contact. Perhaps the key source is a person or company that only occasionally tweets and when they do you want to be alerted immediately. This recipe allows you to receive an email when an individual tweets. You can also set a rule to receive an SMS.
10. Send me an email every time a keyword is mentioned in an RSS feed
This is a recipe I suggested in a recent Journalism.co.uk tip of the day. It is a way you can set up an alert when a keyword is mentioned by a particular news provider.
If you are a journalist and have a favourite ifttt recipe, share it in the comments session below.Similar Posts: #Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – use ‘if this then that’ for story alerts App of the week for journalists: Evernote – A must-have app ‘like having a second brain’ App of the week for Journalists: DropSync for Android – syncs with DropBox Tool of the week for journalists – ifttt, a promising app for dealing with data How to get the most from Google News feeds
Facebook
Dropbox
Instapaper
ifttt
evernote
RSS
Google_Reader
Handy_tools_and_technology
from google
The most popular ‘recipe’, a task designed and shared by others, will give you an idea of how ifttt works. This recipe allows you to connect your Facebook and Dropbox accounts so that when someone tags you in a photo on Facebook, the photo will be added to your Dropbox folder (cloud storage allowing you to access your files on different devices).
Here are ten ifttt recipes for journalists:
1. When you receive an email from a key contact or your editor, you receive an SMS
You no doubt receive scores of emails but there are some senders that are more important to hear from than others. This recipe allows you to set up a key contact, such as a source or your editor, and receive a SMS whenever that person emails you.
2. When you post a link to Delicious, add to Dropbox
If you use Delicious to bookmark interesting stories, this recipe allows you to also save the links to Dropbox. For example, I am interested in new smartphone apps so have set up a connection so that any Delicious bookmark that I tag “app” is posted to a folder in my Dropbox account.
3. Post Google+ posts to your Facebook page
Google+ adds additional responsibility for anyone in the newsroom tasked with managing social media.
It is widely recognised that non-automated posts are best when it comes to Facebook and Google+. This recipe allows you to write a link post in Google+ and automatically post the link to your site’s Facebook page. You can also create a rule to post status updates.
To do this you need to set up an RSS feed of your Google+ account. Copy your Google+ ID, which is the long number in the URL of your Google+ profile, and paste it on the end of http://plu.sr/feed.php?plusr=. My Google+ feed is therefore http://plu.sr/feed.php?plusr=107031542976965456407, for example.
4. Create an Evernote every time you star an item in Google Reader
If you use Google Reader as your RSS feed reader and want a quick way of saving key articles to Evernote, this is a solution.
5. Post to Instapaper (or Read It Later) every time you star an article in Google Reader
If you use Instapaper to read articles later this is a quick way of posting from Google Reader.
6. Post a ‘favourite’ tweet (with links) to Instapaper (or Dropbox or Evernote)
When you come across a tweet with a link and want to save it for later you may well click star to make it a favourite. This recipe allows you to save those favourite tweets and post the linked articles to Instapaper. Alternatively, you can also set this up to save to Dropbox of Evernote.
7. Add favourite Flickr photos to Dropbox
If you post stories you write online, you may well use Flickr images with creative commons licences. Flickr allows you to indicate favourite images that you come across and may want to use at a later date. This recipe saves those images to Dropbox. Alternatively, you can set this up to save favourites to Evernote.
8. Send me an email (or SMS) to remind me about a daily meeting, weekly or monthly task.
If you have a daily or weekly meeting or task to carry out, ifttt can enable you to create reminder.
9. Send me an email (or SMS) every time a certain person tweets
Twitter is a great source for journalists but it is easy to miss a tweet from a key contact. Perhaps the key source is a person or company that only occasionally tweets and when they do you want to be alerted immediately. This recipe allows you to receive an email when an individual tweets. You can also set a rule to receive an SMS.
10. Send me an email every time a keyword is mentioned in an RSS feed
This is a recipe I suggested in a recent Journalism.co.uk tip of the day. It is a way you can set up an alert when a keyword is mentioned by a particular news provider.
If you are a journalist and have a favourite ifttt recipe, share it in the comments session below.Similar Posts: #Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – use ‘if this then that’ for story alerts App of the week for journalists: Evernote – A must-have app ‘like having a second brain’ App of the week for Journalists: DropSync for Android – syncs with DropBox Tool of the week for journalists – ifttt, a promising app for dealing with data How to get the most from Google News feeds
october 2011 by patrix
The iPad Pulse Reader Scales the Charts
june 2010 by patrix
"The application, Pulse News Reader, was developed by Akshay Kothari, 23, and Ankit Gupta, 22, a pair of Indian-born graduate students at Stanford University’s Institute of Design. The two developed the service in the Launch Pad class, which asks budding entrepreneurs to develop and introduce a product in just 10 weeks."
ipad
rss
enterprenuer
indian
pb
june 2010 by patrix
Google Reader Full Feed
april 2010 by patrix
A Google Chrome extension that transforms partial feeds to full feeds within the feed reader.
googlereader
google
chrome
browser
extension
pb
rss
feeds
april 2010 by patrix
John Gruber’s Daring Fireball Gets Comments (Whether He Likes It or Not)
february 2010 by patrix
Gruber has explained that he dislikes comments because they distract from his all-important voice. This is exactly the kind of egotistical statement that makes him unpopular with many people, especially other writers, but a must-read pundit. But Gruber is about to get comments, whether he likes it or not.
mac
johngruber
community
comments
blogging
rss
pb
february 2010 by patrix
Fever° Red hot. Well read.
january 2010 by patrix
Fever takes the temperature of your slice of the web and shows you what's hot.
rss
feeds
apps
january 2010 by patrix
Follow changes to any website
january 2010 by patrix
Google Reader that lets you create a custom feed to track changes on pages that don't have their own feed. Are there any sites that still don't come with RSS-enabled?
rss
googlereader
google
feed
january 2010 by patrix
How to Build a PHP-based RSS Feed Parser
january 2010 by patrix
We’ll be creating a simple site with just two pages; home and news. The idea is to write two PHP functions that will spit out different content; one is for the display of the titles from the feed, and the other is for the content that will appear in a list form like those of a blog archive.
php
rss
tutorial
howto
webdesign
feed
parser
from delicious
january 2010 by patrix
Using Readability with NetNewsWire
january 2010 by patrix
Now I don't have to leave NetNewsWire at all -
tips
howto
rss
netnewswire
readability
reading
nefa
#pb
pb
from twitter
january 2010 by patrix
10 Essential Keyboard Shortcuts for NetNewsWire
january 2010 by patrix
To quote Brent Simmons, the application’s author, “NetNewsWire was designed to be read with a cup of coffee in one hand while the other drives the keyboard.”
netnewswire
rss
feeds
apps
shortcuts
mac
nefa
january 2010 by patrix
The Simple Dollar » A Step-By-Step Guide to Creating a Deal-Finding Homepage
may 2009 by patrix
"Using a number of easy-to-use online tools, I built a single webpage that shows me the best deals from tons of different online sources all in one place, customized to show me just the deals I want."
shopping
deals
money
organization
feeds
rss
may 2009 by patrix
Snackr: An RSS ticker
may 2008 by patrix
What's Snackr? It's an RSS ticker that pulls random items from your feeds and scrolls them across your desktop. When you see a title that looks interesting, you can click on it to pop up the item in a window.
rss
air
software
desktop
productivity
feeds
NEFA
may 2008 by patrix
Seven Tips for Making the Most of Your RSS Reader
april 2008 by patrix
Couple of counter-intuitive idea for managing your RSS subscriptions.
rss
feeds
lifehacks
tips
NEFA
april 2008 by patrix
Newsflash: Google Reader Adds Search Box, Users Rejoice - Lifehacker
september 2007 by patrix
Google has finally added the long-awaited search box to their popular web-based RSS reader, Google Reader. Now you can search across all of your subscribed feeds as a whole, or more granularly across tags or even individual subscriptions.
RSS
google
tools
search
NEFA
september 2007 by patrix
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