May 27th, 2006

Musings On Share Your OPML

Share Your OPML is already a good blog ranking system, and over time it has the chance to become the definitive ranking and recommendation system for blogs. And when I say that, I’m thinking the very long tail of blogs, not just the top 100 or even 1,000 In my original post describing the service, there were a number of commenters who complained this was just another A-List ranking system. Right now, that’s what it is – another top 100 list, little different in actual results than the Technorati 100 and other lists of the most popular blogs out there. But there’s a real difference between what Share Your OPML is doing and other ranking systems. SYO is completely objective and shows exactly what content people are actually reading right now. Other ranking systems are either subjective, or forced to look at either different data (Technorati looks at links) or only data specific to their users (Bloglines ranks blogs based on subscriber numbers on Bloglines). Over time, SYO can become a true “long tail” recommendation engine if a wide swath of the users out there are willing to upload their OPML feed. And they are only a couple of steps away from being there. SYO needs more users. My guess is a few thousand have already uploaded their reading lists, but it will take a lot more before the data is really reflective of what most people are reading. To do this, SYO needs to add more value than it currently does for users. New features have been rolling out over time that help do this. Since the last time I looked, SYO has added a top podcast list and a feed reader to the mix. One way to get more people using SYO is to encourage feed readers like Bloglines to allow people to keep their permanent OPML file at SYO instead of at the reader. This is probably a long way off for Bloglines, the market leader for web based readers. But it is probably something that smaller and newer readers will adopt if encouraged, and if the functionality to make this easy exists at SYO. Well, I’m encouraging them. I want all of my feeds kept in one neutral place. SYO is a good place to do that. But first I need more functionality. I want to tag my feeds (and tag other’s feeds). I like how → Read More

May 7th, 2006

Share Your OPML

Share Your OPML, a new project founded by Dave Winer, is launching officially on Monday. It is a self-described “commons for sharing outlines, feeds, and taxonomy.” It will gather a community of subscription lists and aggregate them in interesting and useful ways. To participate, create an account and upload an OPML file containing the content feeds that you read. Most feed readers like Bloglines, NewsGator, Rojo, Attensa, etc. store the feeds that you read in the OPML file format and can be exported. The feeds that are included in your OPML file are aggregated with feeds other people have uploaded. If you don’t know what all this stuff means, don’t worry. You can still use the site to find new sources of content that you might like to read. This aggregated data is useful. In particular, it will help people find new feeds that they may enjoy. There’s a top 100 list of the most popular feeds which could become the definitive top 100 list once there is a statistically relevant number of users (subject to SYO successfully controlling spam). You can also see other users that have similar reading habits as you (it’s called “subscriptions like mine”). Based on this last feature, John Tropea, Robert Scoble and Dave Winer are my closest matches. I may find other interesting feeds by perusing their lists. There are basic sharing options included now: a user can set sharing to off, which will keep his or her list private (but still include those feeds in the aggregated rankings. Dave Winer says that they’ll have per-feed sharing turned on within a few days. Spam may become an issue with the site as people attempt to game the top 100 list. There are some controls in place now – a feed is only counted once even if it’s in an OPML file multiple times, and only once account can be created from a single email address. Dave has lots of experience dealing with spam from his days running the Weblogs.com ping server, so expect to see additional protective measures put in place as the service evolves. If tools are added that make SYO the easiest place to manage your OPML (including adding feeds, removing feeds, batch operations, categorization/tagging, etc.), some of the more openminded RSS readers may start to allow customers to store their OPML at SYO instead of with the reader. SYO would become → Read More

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OpenLabel — Company added to CrunchBase
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LetsBuy.com — Acquired by Flipkart.
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Peter Kirwan — Invested in OpenLabel.
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Jive Software — Went public with stock symbol NASDAQ:JIVE.
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