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Come on, man -- how many people use the web, and how many people use RSS.
On your flight home, walk up and down the aisle with a notebook and ask people if they use RSS, and tell us what the number is. And even that is not representative, people who travel by air between Europe and North America are not your average web users.
Did you take any stats courses in college Scoble? If not, we need to have a talk, asap. ";->"
And if Dare-O is tuned in, this is part of what really happened when I visited in April 2005. I told them over and over that they weren't going far enough.
RSS is still not mainstream and the average person is still not aware of it.
Dave's first point, "It must be easy to find relevant feeds" is reasonable. But the answer does most definitely *not* lie with centralised subscription.
The web is a distributed system, centralisation runs counter to its healthy development. Web, no, *Internet* 101. I'm actually a little surprised at the suggestion - the primary benefit of what Dave calls reading lists is that the subscription data is on the web, accessible over http, file export/import not required. Pushing such data into a centralised silo undermines those benefits.
Once its in the browsers and they can subscribe to blogs and feeds easily, then it may catch on, but they still won't know what RSS is, or need to!
...an easy way for people to add the things they want to read about on a regular basis, to a familiar interface (web pages)?
...an easy way for publishers and editors to provide high quality lists of things their audience wants (reading lists on web pages)?
or perhaps ask how they think something like this would work, look, etc..?
The easiest way to implement this would be simple polling, *exactly* like RSS reading, though that would imply per-user choice of master service. But smarter ways for distributed maintenance of subscription lists are available through WebDAV, Atom protocol, RDF diff/patch or for that matter MS's Simple Sharing Extensions.
Yes, I know the 80% is a skewed number, it's 80% of the web-savy, blogger, conference-goer geeky minority who were in the 21st century long before the rest of us:-)
But let's be real and ask ourselves of the purpose of our commnication. More often than not we don't want to address the entire population of Planet Earth:-) More often than not we have a target audience ... and chances are in many cases that target will be the innovator crowd, in which case 80% is not that bad.
OK, you can throw stones now :-)
I used Windows Live as a basis for my friend and it took me a hell lot of pain just to help him subscribe to some important feeds for him...try it yourself...
this is more like a critique on Windows Live...please ask these guys to make all of this simpler...add content is useless in some ways and if you have more than 20 subscribed feeds, the interface just becomes clunky and hard to navigate...
btw, i still managed to start him off on Windows Live ;)
Until then its a fringe thing, like, well, blogging.
So once again you are an edge case ;)
Given that "break" in technology adoption, I'd say there's another one even among Internet users. Those who perceive a need for the types of services being offered via RSS have found RSS. The rest have lives outside the Net, and chiefly use it for email and maybe pay bills. They'd say they have no interest in RSS.
Dave, you'd starve trying to find Macs throughout the South also. They do exist, but are quite rare.
A mainstream user cares only about the results, not the underlying format of those results. As much as we would like otherwise RSS is a format. It’s not viewed as xml in all it’s glory. I would think the question will be, do you know what news’s feed’s are. Of course this is talking about a general none technical consumer.
Sure a web site admin/creator or a hard core blogger will know, but that’s as far as it will ever get until allot more time passes, or more implementations take shape.
What are we doing useful with RSS besides syndication of news ?
I don’t see an application/standard that takes all hardware/vendor driver/software update feeds and updates your computer when updates are available. Why aren’t these people using it for deployment or patches/upgrades etc.. Fit’s quite nicely. The future of RSS is large we all see that. However it need’s different implementations and uses. Ton’s of stuff can be done with it, not just blog/comments/news stuff. Until we see these different implementations come out, I can’t see that happening.
We tend to hide the implementation details to give a consumer what they want. Information.
And, the followup question is "Who is Who?"
Is "Who" everybody? Every web user? Every blogger?
Depends, doesn't it, on your own objectives?
Anyone who shows up at the same conference -- or reads the same blogs -- as Winer or Scoble has already sliced themselves off from the rest of humanity.
Remember these two things:
1. People who aren't interested in technology don't pay atention to technology.
2. People who aren't interested in technology use technology when it makes it easier to do something they want to do. They still don't care about technology.
A couple of weeks ago I released a free blogging client called Bleezer (www.bleezer.com). Last week the local newspaper interviewed me and did a third of a page story on how I was making blogging easier.
The most frequent question I've gotten since then?
"So what is a blog exactly?"
RSS is the furthest thing from those people's minds. Oh, did I mention I live in Waterloo, Canada, home of the RIM BlackBerry. So it isn't as if these people don't know technology.
Most people still go to the web browser, visit a known site, or get to a location via Google (or some other friendly global search company). Whereas for myself my starting point for all my browsing is my RSS aggregator.
Maybe when you're hanging out with the crowd "in the RSS know", as Robert seems to be, then you'd get 80% of people raising their hands. But for others, like mom and pop, and regular Joe Blogs (pun intended) out there, they have no idea about RSS.
Most newreaders aren't that good. Most people don't know what the orange XML is or any of the other icons or "subscribe" (email?).
Lately I've had good luck with Bloglines + the litle bookmarklet they offer to save feeds.
Now when I am on a blog I like, I just click the bookmark in the horizontal link bar at the top of my browser and it subscribes me. I don't even go looking for icons or subscribe links.
A standard, quick 1-2 step process like this would entice more RSS subscriptions and participation.
That said, scoble in his speech made a passionate case as to why we're all crazy not to be using it more exhaustively in our lives. I believe that will come. but there is a huuuge gap between the alpha geeks and the rest of world on this one. first thing first, we need to lose the acronym "RSS". acronyms and screenfull of xml are pretty good way to terrify joe/jane average user. RSS will take off once everyone can use RSS without even *realizing* that they are using it.