Working on a presentation for a conference where I'm going to talk about RSS and am wondering - what are the coolest examples of nonhuman generation of RSS feeds? I know that technically every search feed, stock report feeds and things like that are generated without the immediate involvement of humans. But some time ago Lisa Williams told me about a buoy at sea that publishes a feed of hourly updates to all kinds of weather conditions. That's from the Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System (GoMOOS). She told me she would like to be able to subscribe to a feed that would tell her when her home's heating oil was running low.
There's got to be more examples out there - anyone care to point to ones you know of? I know there are systems to track package delivery (like FedEx). There have to be some RFID systems that utilize RSS. I know there are quite a number of innovative examples of RSS feeds generated in libraries. Limited traffic reports for particular cities from Yahoo and Traffic.com. Incidentlog.com is a cool use of police reports, mashing up feeds and Google Maps.
Really far out examples of RSS feeds being generated for a useful purpose without substantial human input is what I'm looking for. I really believe there will be a lot of this in the future, but the sooner we can find examples the sooner we can prepare ourselves and others for the idea. Please do post examples in comments if you can think of or find any that I haven't.
To be honest I'd be curious to see peoples' favorite applications of RSS in any context. Anything already listed by Tim Yang or Basement.org excluded.
California Attorney General candidate Rocky Delgadillo doesn't just have a long list of endorsements on his side - he's got new web tools going for him as well. Delgadillo's campaign just launched a new service offering for supporters wanting to keep up with the campaign - RSS to IM notification from immedi.at.
The letters RSS don't appear anywhere on the site, in fact there's not a link to subscribe to news from the campaign in a feed reader - but there is a link that allows you to plug in your IM username and get instant notification of new developments that can be passed on to others. Timely updates have an excitement that may be more likely to spread by word of mouth.
Delgadillo's "vision" page begins with the sentence: "As I look around our state today, it's not just crime and violence that threaten our families. It's also the greed and arrogance of corporate power run amok." Sounds interesting enough to me. I wonder how extensively the campaign is using RSS to IM internally.
There has been a lot of complaining around the web lately about Feedburner - even Dave Winer is discussing alternatives to Feedburner's controlling the domains of everyone's feeds. People say they are worried that if Feedburner dies or turns evil then all is lost. I do not think that's the case. Number one reason, look at this code: <channel> <title>Marshall Kirkpatrick</title> <link>http://marshallk.com</link> <description>Know more, faster. And then share it.</description> <pubDate>Mon, 22 May 2006 22:55:20 +0000</pubDate> <generator>http://wordpress.org/?v=1.5.2</generator>
<language>en</language>
That's the first 5 lines of the code from my personal blog's Feedburner landing page. Our RSS readers all show both the RSS URL from Feedburner feeds and the HTML URL of the sites those feeds originate from. No disconnect there. Look in your OPML file. It's going to be ok.
If we had to, I'll bet someone could write a script that could look over your OPML file, visit the HTML URLs and replace the Feedburner URLs in your file with the standard RSS URLs for WordPress, Blogger, MT, LiveJournal or whatever type of blog each one was. It's going to be ok. Now go enjoy Feedburner's statistics, autopinging, javascript plug-ins following feed items (FeedFlare, with API), plagarism monitoring ("unusual uses"), baked in support for email delivery of feed items and goodness knows what else. Am I wrong about this? That's how it seems to me and I'm usually not a big fan of trusting authority - but really, the RSS freak-out over the last few days has been over the top.
Charlie Wood at Moonwatcher has an interesting post today about the executive blogs at enterprise super-vendor SAP. Apparently you can't subscribe to RSS feeds of the exec blogs. SAP rep responds and says they are working on it. This is interesting to me for a number of reasons:
RSS is so strong in the consumer space that it is now being demanded in the enterprise space. That's a path that's becoming all the more common in the Web 2.0 world.
Enterprise adoption of a key, if not the key Web 2.0 technology is lagging. I'm always curious about the pace of adoption in various sectors, so I'll be filing this one away.
If you look at the image Charlie posts from the SAP blogs, it reads "Executive Blogs: Please notify me when new blogs are available." That means send me an email notification of new posts, I presume. It amazes me that such a big player wouldn't take the time to figure out that a blog is a series of posts and each post is not called a blog. Jeez, through a couple thousand dollars at a business blog consultant already and make sure you don't look silly when engaging in an established and outspoken community. Maybe I'm wrong here and that really means, send me an email when a new executive starts blogging - but I doubt it.
People around the web have been talking about the RSS support service FeedPass, which as you can see in action here at a FeedPass page for my personal blog, or this NYTimes feed I've wrapped in AdSense and split the revenue from with FeedPass (they get 2/3 of the revenue). The service provides links to subscribe to a feed with a large number of subscription mechanisms, learn more about RSS feeds, tag the feed itself and more. It also provides a preview of recent items and gives you the option to tag those items in a wide variety of social bookmarking systems.
Major, major badness issue: their demo screen-cast shows the feed from Engadget being plugged in! "Monetize your blogroll or links you have to other popular blogs" by adding your Adsense ID. You get more money if you own the feed yourself but you still get bucks for content you don't own! 2/3 page views go to your AdSense ID if you own it, 1/3 if you don't - that means FeedPass has a greater economic incentive for you to plug in feeds you don't own than those you do! Sheesh! Talk about dressing up a pig. Rounded corners and other nice web 2.0 aesthetics sure make wrapping some one else's feed in your Adsense look legit, huh? I can't believe that. They grab the Edgadget logo and everything. I don't see anyone's name on the site, or any contact info but an email address so maybe Mr. Jim Woolley, the Feedpass.com site registrant, is behind it and knows he's dressing up a pig.
So the FeedPass pages only show an excerpt from the first 4 lines of a feed item - I imagine it will be argued that this is fair use. Nonetheless, the words "Copyright 2006 Weblogs, Inc. The contents of this feed are available for non-commercial use only." are at the top of the Engadget XML code. And it's just a low thing to do. Unbelievable. I've seen nothing but positive reviews on this so far - how come? I'm not a big copyright freak by any means, but the gall here is amazing. Simple solution really, buddy - just require the claiming proccess.
Jupiter Research has released a study finding that 63 percent of large companies plan to syndicate content via Really Simple Syndication (RSS) by the end of 2006 and that 29 percent currently do so. The report says that 48 percent of current RSS publishers are spending $250,000 or more to deploy and manage syndicated content.
The study says this outstrips adoption on the part of readers but that those of us who read feeds are good spenders and thus a key demographic. Are companies betting on IE and Outlook support? All the other benefits of syndication? We shall see. Sounds like good news to me. Found via RSS Specifications, a funky site without permalinks, comments or trackbacks. Hmmmm...
The most recent is an intro to a new Business Week online segment called Web Smart. The series of stories will highlight in text and a podcast a different company "that's using the Web to improve productivity, reach out to the public, rev up marketing, or streamline internal operations."
I use Grazr for my blogroll on my personal site, saving huge space with a more interesting, dynamic display of my favorite feeds live. I also add it to the end of interviews I do with people, providing a preview of an OPML file containing their feeds and other related feeds. Mathew Ingram of Toronto's Globe and Mail uses Grazr on his personal blog to preview the writings of participants in this month's conference in Canada about Web 2.0, Mesh. Lots of potential here, and I'm glad to see the project is getting support. Hopefully this won't be another cool tool that dies on the vine.
Here's an example of a Grazr implementation. Click around inside it, the left border will move you up a level.
Dave Winer launched a neat looking new online community today for people to upload and share their OPML files, or list of RSS feeds they are subscribed to. There's a top 100 list (so far this blog is #70, thanks!) so you can see what other geeks like to read. There appears to be a recommendation engine, feed/file management and goodness knows what else. I think it looks great. Sharing OPML files is something I've been thinking about for awhile. Some times I fantasize about starting a blog just for sharing OPML files of my favorite feeds on a wide variety of topics.
Neat things here: you can see who subscribes to any given RSS feed and how many feeds they are subscribed to. Todd Cochrane is nuts (1000+ feeds), but Danny Ayers is nutser (2000+). There's some folks who know how to not get overwhelmed by feeds.
One word of caution: if you have, say, a puppy kicking fetish and you've subscribed to a search feed for your name plus the words "kicks puppies" (just to check if anyone knows) then you might want to take that feed out of the OPML file you share on Winer's site. Or maybe not, kicking puppies is nothing to be ashamed of - right? Right?
I suggest using Newsgator, it's my
favorite and I think that anyone who really can use RSS will use RSS quickly and will want a fully functional feed
reader. Some time ago I set up a demonstration account at Newsgator.com that you can log into if you've never
seen it before. User name is marshalldemo and password is welcome.
One downside to Newsgator is that
it doesn't come with an autodiscover, one-click button you can put on your browser to subscribe to feeds. You can
find one, though, at blummy.com - a great little service I always recommend.
I also recommend checking out a couple of tools that enable you to get faster updates from the most important feeds
you are interested in: immedi.at and zaptxt.com
I've also got a long introduction to how I typically teach
people to read feeds over on my personal blog, as well as a simple
demonstration of how you can combine search, rss and rss-to-HTML to create an automated newswire on your site - in
this case news about surveys concerning today's pro-immigration strike and boycot.
It's been around awhile, but advertising in RSS feeds is set to expand greatly over the next few months.
Feedburner is making a big push. I just found an ad in a Blogdigger feed that
I found interesting enough to share here.
I'm subscribed to a Blogdigger search for my name and in the
feed a minute ago there was an item that was just an advertisement. It was for OurMedia, which is very cool (even if only marginally functional), and that's contextual
to my work in the both the nonprofit and social software sector. It was strange to see a whole item as an ad, it
took me a minute to stop looking for my search term in the item. There's a link at the end for feedback on the
advertising, which is great! I took some screen caps that you can find along with more thoughts after the jump.
Heather Green
has a short post about Castrol Motor
Oil's podcast on car racing and motor oil and the way they promoted it by buying ads in Feedburner's RSS feeds. Someday this kind of thing is going to be old news - but
these days it's still exciting. I love it when non-tech organizations make use of new communication
technologies. So much for this stuff being meaningful only to coffee-house lurkers with wispy beards and
sweaters, huh? I know that's the type I relate to best, and Green must too since she spelled the popular oil
company's name 3
different ways in a one paragraph story! :)
As the press release said: “Adding RSS aggregation to Newsweek.com
brings a new dimension of customization to our site,” said Kevin Stuart, audience development manager of
Newsweek.com. “The NewsGator Hosted Solution allowed us to customize the offering based on criteria that
was important to us, and gives us great flexibility to rapidly augment, modify, or edit the content we make available
to our users.”
One question I have after looking at the example account is wether readers are able to
import and export their subscriptions by OPML. I don't see that they are, and the way that Newsgator supports
OPML is one of it's best traits. Gotta have that.
I was asked to write a guest post today over at The Big Act, the company
blog of a neat web services provider for small businesses called SproutIt, on a topic
they call Management by Feeds. In other words, using RSS
to keep track of your team and work. I love questions like that. I wrote a long post focusing on obstacles I see
before this otherwise very promising approach would seem viable to me.
Those were:
The number and sources of feeds to be watched are so dynamic and unpredictable that synchronizing across a team
adds a whole new layer of complexity. Maybe dynamic OPML reading lists will help with this.
A
huge percentage of end-users are cannot be relied on to contribute to decision making processes based on RSS. Too
many people are still unfamiliar with the medium, and browser/email support for RSS isn't helping the
situation.
The company, Sproutit, is quite
interesting as well. One of the most noteworthy things they offer is an email program that learns to recognize
common types of emails you receive and recommend past emails you've sent in response. Sounds pretty cool to me.