Tech Life These sound real

Three Links and a Thought

I’m in the midst of writing up a response to the complex pile of comments which landed on the Remotely article, but in the meantime, here’s some recent landings on my feed list. Starting with oldest first:

Tech.Memeorandum appears to comb all tech news and weblog sources and then does some “magic” to assess popularity. I haven’t done any research, but I’m guessing it heavily weights cross-linking as well as comment activity on other sites. That’s irrelevant… what’s cool is that it does capture hot pipin’ relevant bits. If you’re a nerd like me, you want as few stops as possible to capture buzz and Memeorandum does it.

Memorandum suffers from the wall-of-text problems that still make del.icio.us intimidating and a tricky browsing experience, but if you’re simply reaping data from an aggregator, who cares?

TechCrunch’s stated goal is “Tracking Web 2.0” which means I should starting foaming at the mouth regarding Web 2.0 (again). Problem is, Michael Arrington, the site’s writer, is doing a good job of sifting through the noise to find Web 2.0 bits that deserve a second click. I base this entirely on my completely unscientific method of noticing when I leave Bloglines to read a story at the actual site.

ValleyWag. There has been a well defined need for a good valley gossip rag since Infoworld nuked the original Cringely back forever ago. Still, the idea that I care about who the Google founders are nailing is absurd, so, clearly, they’ve got a hit on their hands.

My hope is that the Wag takes a stab on software gossip, as well, because I’ve got serious concerns about the quantity of juicy nerd_celebrity gossip that’s out there.

The thought is a simple one. A majority of the sites sitting in Bloglines represent the voice of a single person. I am wondering out loud why that is the case. Is there any way to articulate what is lost when a site aggregates multiple voices into one other than, “It doesn’t sound real”?

# February 7, 2006
2 Comments (Comments are closed)

Popular

To understand nerds, you simply need The Handbook.

Bright ideas need the FriendDA.

You have 30 seconds to make an impression with your resume.

Stop reading right now. Look at your desktop. How many tasks are you working on besides reading this weblog? A lot? You've got N.A.D.D.

Shipping a 1.0 product isn't going to kill you, but it will try.

The Rands Vegas System; is the perfect companion for Sin City.

The Shirt

Rands Shirt

HOSTING BY

(mt) logo

The Book

Managing Humans Cover

Relevant

» Alex King
» Cabel.Name
» Daring Fireball
» Joel on Software
» Legends of the Sun Pig
» Seth Godin
» ~stevenf
» Subtraction
» Veer

Categories

» Apple
» Best Of
» Buzz
» Hollywood
» Jerkcity
» Management
» Plugs
» Surf
» Tech Life
» Vegas
» Writing

CONTACT

» Contact Rands
» Rands in RSS
» iChat/IM: jerkyrands
» Amazon Wish List
» Flickr
» Twitter
» Forums

Search