Library clips

sharing ideas thoughts and feedback

May 19, 2006

Rojo search and Rojo memedigger

Filed under: General, rss, readers

A little while ago I caught Rojo playing with search, well now I think it’s ready, as you can search stories…what about searching just my rojo, just my tags (saved stories), saved (flagged, mojo’d, read), you get what I mean.

And what about searching in a feed tag, or even just one feed, I’d like that…and limiting it to read/unread…or searching just in the title field.
My Rojo is my world, just like my social bookmarks (I don’t really use this module in Rojo), so to be able to search to the granular level in these services is essential.

Another thing is that you can now submit a story, that is mojo any webpage via a bookmarklet…wow, Rojo is a:
- feed reader
- social bookmark service
- memetracker (well not really, just relevance sorting…it doesn’t cluster stories and discussion)
- memedigger
- recommendation service

Even put a button on your blog, what about for each blog post, kind of like Digg It.

Mojo this page

Looks like search is sticking, they have posted about it.

News OPML Generator

Filed under: rss, readers, opml

The OPML Feed Roller is just getting better, now you can make search feeds from various news engines at the same time.

Actually this is a separate service, it is the Persistent News Search OPML Feedroll Generator, the earlier service is the Social Bookmarking RSS Feeds - OPML Generator

…maybe both these services could be merged into one.

I just noticed if you make several profiles, that is, numerous OPML’s, you can also roll (merge) to make a longer OPML…but you only get the code for this you don’t get a new URL.
When you do this maybe it it could make a mother OPML URL, where all the individual OPML’s are “inclusions”.
Same goes with the bookmark roller.

gada.be offers meta-searching…enter a search term, select a field (eg. blogs, social, news), and it will display the latest posts from each engine, and an RSS feed for each engine (but not a spliced feed). Then click on OPML, and you will get an OPML URL, pretty nifty, especially that it also displays search results.

Gee, TalkDigger could offer OPML for a search, only difference is that the engines are mixed (blogs, web, etc…)
…but, you can do link searches, imagine getting an ego link search OPML.

I have a TalkDigger link search for every blog post, look for this icon …clicking on this will take you to TalkDigger, but imagine that it could all be displayed in your blog via a OPML grazr…see more.

Kebberfegg is similar to the OPML Feed Rollers, like gada.be it does meta-searching, only the OPML isn’t unique.

MonitorThis also does the same thing…I even like that you can open it in an OPML Browser…it generates an OPML code in order to save as a file of you can click “open file in web browser” for the OPML URL.

In the future perhaps we can login to see our saved OPML Feed Rolls, even tag them if we have load of them.

date range printing blogs in non-reverse order

Filed under: blogs, tools

The other day I posted on printing blog posts, and have some more to say.

Today I came across a blog that had heaps of posts I was interested in, so I wanted to get acquainted with this blog, so I went through the categories and went through the date archives…there was so much good stuff
(too much to read online, print format is easier on the eyes and good for the train ride home).

The homepage had about 10 posts, so I tried printing it, but it didn’t print well, so RSS2PDF or HTML2PDF fixed that up.

But then my next problem was that I had to page to see the next 10 posts and print again, now you can’t do this with RSS2PDF as it only shows the last 10 posts, if there was RSS archiving then it would be OK.

So I clicked to the next page, got the URL and entered it in HTML2PDF and did a print, then clicked to the next page of posts, entered that address into HTML2PDF and did a print, and so on.

I was thinking would this be much easier if I could just set a page range…eg. print me all posts from page1-5

…and even apply this to a tag or a category, enter a category URL and print from page1-5
…or even a full post search result.

Then the other thing is that you have to read from the last page to the front page, and you have to read from the bottom of the page up…a totally inconvenient experience.

What blogs need are a reverse button, from the homepage you could read a blog from the first post downwards, and click to the next page, you could choose a month or date URL and read it in (non-reverse) chronological order, or choose a category URL and do the same
…this is a problem as well in RSS Readers, if you haven’t read a feed in a while you may need to read an earlier post to make sense of the current post.

email and blog comments

Filed under: blogs, conversation

Don’t you hate it, when you reply to a comment someone left on your blog, that you are not sure if they are going to see this reply.
Will they remember to come back, did they subscribe to the RSS comment post feed, did they tick the email notification box (my blog doesn’t have this), did they use any method to track comments they have made.

What I try to do is reply in the post so the discussion is centralised, but I will also email the person to tell them I have responded.
Wouldn’t it be good if I could ping that person automatically, when I submit a new comment to the blog post.

Most blogs have trackback which is ideal for this, but there is only a trackback for posts, what about a homepage trackback of some sort…if I could trackback the person in my reply comment then I would be more confident they will be notified of my reply.
Maybe a comments box needs a trackback field, I guess you could just link to the person’s homepage in the body of the comment and hope they check their ego feeds, but even then, the blog engimes won’t pick this up as there is no real comments engine.

Maybe a comment can have an email field, that way when you leave a comment you can email it to people at the same time, kind of like email a friend for a comment…this way you will be sure the person knows you have replied.
I mean, you often have email this post (from a blog or even from within an RSS Reader), so why not email this comment, but for it to happen at the same time you publish it…just like you trackback at the time of publishing.

That’s it, leaving a comment on a blog post can be just like sending an email…and if you don’t want to fill in the email field, you don’t have to, just publish the comment as usual.
If you are leaving the 15th comment and want to reply to commentor number 5, you can have that email address in the attention field, and all the rest of the commentors email automatically in the cc: field, or just a few in the cc: field, or none at all in the cc: field.

Actually this might have spam issues, pushing isn’t in vogue, people need to look after themselves and pull content.

Attention : Long or short blog posts

Filed under: blogs, attention

A post of mine called 10 reasons why blogs are better than email is an excerpt from an earlier blog post called Internal communication blogs and km2.0…this post was long and jammed packed with stuff, it didn’t have a real specific focus, but some posts are like that sometimes.

Anyway, it got no comments, one incoming link, and was bookmarked 8 times in del.icio.us…not a good strike rate. It got me thinking that people might not have time to read long posts, and decide to skip reading it all together, or they may decide to read it when they have time but forget to do so.

It may seem that shorter blog posts are best, as they will get read, attention is not just about content that matches your interests or time, it can even be about content (and the length of the content) at a specific point in time, ie. you may be interested but not right now, as it will take too long to read, I’ll read it later.
Hopefully this person will have good personal information management skills, otherwise the post will be forgotten about.

So considering all this, it may seem that shorter blog posts, or even blog posts that stick to a focused narrow topic may be best.
I’m not talking a link blog…but it just seems essay type posts just may not get read, whereas in a journal you are prepared for longer pieces, but in a blog you just want to know the latest and quick, because there is lots more to get through.

Also the title of the newer post is more provocative, more catchy (I have the terms blogs and email, this will appear in more search feeds…also my previous title had the term km2.0, I could of separated these or used the term knowledge management).

In closing the newer title is more catchy and the content matches the title perfectly…it is a shorter post, and to the point.

Let’s see how it does in comparison.

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