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On the techcrunch blog, there is a form to subscribe via email, more than once I've used it for search, so putting search on your site and having it easily available and accessible is really going to be helpful.
RSS feed. Sometimes I have to right click and view source, then do a ctrl + f to find a feed on a site. Make your RSS feeds easy to find, please.
A car is made up of various parts, but throwing everything in under the hood isn't going to help, even if you have everything, using it properly is important.
A good font size is a plus, too, the most important thing is that I want to read the blog, after all. Sure, I can get it via an aggregator, but there is always someone behind the times so to speak, so in addition to a good font size, support older standards where applicable.
Quit cold turkey. Of course, you know what they say...best way to stop, is never to start.
"Do as I say, not as I do." Heheheh!
If you have control over your own domain and shell access, check out Mike's 2 minute mobile web hack.
If you're just a consumer of an unforgiving website (like Scoble's) try the Google Wireless Transcoder.
I'm not entirely convinced that 'most recent first' is the best way to go either - a little against the establishment I know...
"Someone I met today was talking to me about reading blogs and said “I wish bloggers made links pop up as new browser windows.” Or something like that. Hated using the back button."
I just discovered ony a few minutes ago that in using Firefox with the scrolling mouse button click on the link and you will open the link in a new tab.
Cheers Plu
Actually, I find myself subscribing more and more to the long tail blogs and just getting my fix of A list blogs through Memeorandum/Techmeme. I don't think I'm missing much.
On the usability issue, I think the following things are critical (all IMHO, of course)
1. An about me/about this blog link or blurb; someone landing via a search engine should instantly know what the blog is about.
2. A standard RSS icon (or minimally, an orange RSS icon) and a word that says "subscribe" - people get subscriptions, many are clueless about what RSS is. Personally I link it to my feedburner page; a raw XML page wouldn't make much sense to a noob.
3. A search box.
4. Post permalinks should also be pretty prominent, as well as where to leave a comment (if you want them to leave comments, anyway).
Not every social drinker becomes a raging alcoholic.
And true, I am no Saint, more strategically pragmatically hypocritical. And it's not a perfect world, and heck, I might even start up a real blog. But I am still theoretically against such...but same advice I'd give to World of Warcrafters and others, quit before it ruins your life.
As for reading - yes, the open in new tab is a concept which is the most helpful in reading but hard to explain to most people. "What do you mean you can have more than one window open?"
I am curious how IE 7 will change that. :)
Practice clicking links with the right mouse button or the scroll wheel. I say practice, because if you're really new, you may not be used to it. (If you're using a Mac, get a Microsoft Mouse--which I use and can recommend--or maybe a Mighty Mouse, which I have never used, so I'm not sure. If you're using a MacBook, set your preferences so that tapping two fingers on the trackpad gives you a right-click).
I love Dave Watanabe's NewsFire reader on Mac.
www.newsfirerss.com
It works well for newbies, but also has a ton of powerful features that let you switch easily between folder views and river of news, and also let you set special smart feeds that use any of the main blog and web search engines to pull in posts that match your search criteria. (warning; it's relentless nagware during the free trial, but it's worth paying for.)
For mobile devices email and SMS is still king..... I hope Dave comes up with something good for blackberries but in the meantime there is ZapTXT
Scoble, how do you manage synchronizing three readers ? I know Feeddemon and NG can connect but how about Attensa ?
I came late to following blogs because I didn't think I had the time to search through web sites. I had no idea that something like RSS was available. Lastly, I can't remember the last time I was told something was Really Simple and it was. Usually it was simple if you were a systems programmer with 15 years experience. But this time, it couldn't be easier.
I have NewsFire set up so that when I click on links it magically opens up new tabs in Firefox. I then cmd+tab over to delve deeper when I want to.
I think it sucks that after several years of doing this stuff we're still stuck with the same damn problem of having to constantly context switch from one application to another to consume a large inter-related set of data. Feed consumption needs a new usability/UI paradigm, badly, and it needs it right now. Unfortunately, much easier said than done.
Right click to get options to open in a new browser window or click the "Open in Browser" button on the top right of the preview pane.
I will never use online aggregators and I will never go back to using combo apps like Thunderbird or Opera.
All the best,
Jay
http://myblog.es/tera-patrick