Yahoo Email + RSS Integrates Blogs 133
yapplejax writes "In the new war of the Internet based applications, Yahoo is testing creating an email folder as the hub for RSS instead of using a web page for the feeds. " I've long thought this was the best way to do it- I've used web and application RSS readers for years, and email clients are simply a better interface.
Finally! (Score:1)
Re:Finally! (Score:1)
Associated Press article (Score:3, Informative)
Pine (Score:2, Funny)
Get it? Pine? Pining? Hahahahahahahasomebodykillme
Poor guy ... (Score:2, Funny)
Or someone in his area take him behind the barn and end his misery.
Bloglines is my answer (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't think I've ever seen CmdrTaco reply in comments, but I'd love to hear his reasons for this. I've gone the hardcore geeky route with rss2email [aaronsw.com] and also the true standalone desktop aggregator route. What I've settled on is Bloglines [bloglines.com], because I use 4 machines in different locations quite frequently. Bloglines simply makes this easiest and maintains state perfectly between all 4. I'm on win2k, XP, and OSX on those 4 machines. The Bloglines notifier extension for Firefox is quite handy as well.
Re:Bloglines is my answer (Score:1)
Re:Bloglines is my answer (Score:1)
Don't think I've ever seen CmdrTaco reply in comments(...)
He often [slashdot.org] does.
Full circle (Score:4, Insightful)
Has anyone else noticed the trend to read RSS of blogs/forums in an application window- is rather similar to basic old Usenet of old?
Re:Full circle (Score:2)
Re:Full circle (Score:2)
Re:Bloglines is my answer (Score:2)
Re:Bloglines is my answer (Score:2)
"There is a problem with the database. Please try again later"
Real great stuff they got there...
Search Technorati for '"river of news" email' (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Search Technorati for '"river of news" email' (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Search Technorati for '"river of news" email' (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Search Technorati for '"river of news" email' (Score:5, Interesting)
With that said, I prefer the specialised RSS readers over Outlook-lookalikes.
The Church of Outlookology (Score:1)
Still, I have to agree with the idea that shifting stuff out of the inbox (even if to a folder named "Sometime Later") in batches is a goo
Re:Search Technorati for '"river of news" email' (Score:4, Interesting)
I used to have my email client beep and flash to tell me I had new email, then I realised I wasn't getting anything done.
So now, it doesn't even tell me if I have unread mail or not - I check it when I'm not busy, and deal with anything then.
People still thought I'll respond instantly, but it doesn't take long to train them that if something needs my attention, call me - and if I'm too busy, leave a voice message. They get priority, email is an 'as and when' proposition now.
Mark
Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:3, Informative)
To the best of my knowledge, if you get spam from this, it's your own fault for subscribing to crappy feeds.
Re:Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:1)
Re:Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:1)
Re:Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:1)
Re:Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:1)
Re:Is this another path for SPAM? (Score:1)
I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:4, Insightful)
Give me a local machine (which is to say non-spyware) version of this and I might just be interested because then my RSS choices don't automatically associate me with any particular group in the corporate and/or government mindsets. For example, if a particular RSS feed is read frequently by a known terrorist, I am also then to be associated with a known terrorist?
No thanks, I'd rather be invisible and local.
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:1)
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:1)
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:1)
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:2)
No thanks, I'd rather be invisible and local.
You're using HTTP in order to get your xml/rss feeds, right? So that means each and every request may contain one or many of those lovely delicacies known as cookies. Besides, many rss readers rely on the ie activeX for the dirty plumbing stuff.
I think I'll stick with stealing the morning newspaper from the paperboy's bike to get my news.
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:2)
I think I'll stick with stealing the morning newspaper from the paperboy's bike to get my news.
Boy, that just went from paranoid to paranoid...er. Companies track trends, its true. My fear is not that Yahoo has some clue as to what I read (shit, when you search for "xxx boobies" they probably know who you are) but it's when the government gets the ability to subpoena that information that I start to get scared.
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:1)
Oh ... woops, never mind.
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:2)
Re:I like the privacy of anonymity better (Score:1)
So that they can help you get them, through a convenient, well organized interface.
You have certainly pointed out some real disadvantages to this approach. However, it is silly to suggest there are not any advantages.
Big Deal. Use Thunderbird (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Big Deal. Use Thunderbird (Score:2)
Is that so hard?
Old news (Score:4, Informative)
Mod Parent Up (Score:2)
Re:Old news (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Old news (Score:3, Interesting)
And that's why I carry my Opera RSS feeds on a USB stick (basically, you just need to move the Mail directory in Opera's app data dir). You need to have Opera installed on the machine to access it, but I rarely have the need for RSS feeds on other people's computers. As long as my laptop, my work PC and my home PC are synchronized, I'm fine.
Newspaper-style is the best for RSS feeds (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't think using an email client to read RSS feeds is the best choice. The best choice is having the RSS reader generate a 'newspaper-style' webpage that lists all the latest posts in a certain feed folder.
Using an email client for news reading is so 1999. You'll have to click on each headline to know what the content is all about in the preview pane. Us
Getting there (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Getting there (Score:5, Funny)
Can I tag Usenet groups? Can I delicious them to the bookmarkiverse and flickr them across the photosphere? Can I TrackBack a Usenet post and moblog a counterpost from a flashmob?
No? Not interested. (sips latte)
Re:Getting there (Score:2)
this is where we slap you with a wet trout...
Re:Getting there (Score:1)
Usenet vs. RSS (Score:5, Interesting)
It also makes Usenet very democratic: anybody can say anything, anonymously. Those two things will always be opposite sides of the same coin. RSS requires more resources of your own (though there are a remarkable number of free blogging sites, so anybody anywhere can create a blog as long as they have Web access).
Unfortunately, the number of anonymous sources with brilliant information is infinitesimal compared to the number of people willing to spew crap into whatever data stream is available for free. And that's why bloggers won't go to Usenet: they lack the control necessary to keep readers. RSS gives them that control.
Personal/shared karma (Score:2)
BTW, was it
Re:Personal/shared karma (Score:2)
Re:Usenet vs. RSS (Score:2)
Huh? Sorry but you lost me already. They are both PULL. With usenet, you connect to your usenet server, see if there are a
Re:Usenet vs. RSS (Score:2)
I suppose you could use the Usenet protocol like this, where each blogger set up his own Usenet server and you pulled from that. That would have some advantages over RSS (like two-way communication). But that's
Re:Getting there (Score:2)
How about using a newsgroup reader instead? (Score:2)
Akregator presents RSS in this way (Score:3, Interesting)
Screenshots [sourceforge.net]
Re:Akregator presents RSS in this way (Score:1)
It doesn't pull down the whole article... (Score:2)
There are multiple modes, see screenshots.
Re:It doesn't pull down the whole article... (Score:1)
Re:How about using a newsgroup reader instead? (Score:2)
As for an online and pre-existing service like Gmane, I don't know. This allows you to run your own local nntp server for rss feeds though.
Get yourself a KlipFolio (Score:1)
Outlook 12 (Score:1, Interesting)
Newsgator (Score:1)
UUNET and GNUS (Score:2)
So it is a newsreader that can do your mail too.
Re:UUNET and GNUS (Score:1)
It's a shame, that for 5 years I've been reading Slashdot, it is actually first time I see Gnus being mentioned in email-related discussion. Those kids with their posh buttony mail clients, Thunderbird, bah!
Re:UUNET and GNUS (Score:2)
I've been forced onto an exchange server, nothing has ever been the
same again. Click, click, point, crawl through email in outlook that I would
have flown through in Gnus.
I really miss it.
Phil
Re:UUNET and GNUS (Score:1)
Re:UUNET and GNUS (Score:2)
one email client and nobbling all the others, they ensure that
they have to do the minimum amount of work necessary, while
their users have to put up with a crap client.
Great plan. For them.
Phil
depends on the feed (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been sketching out ideas and prototypes on a "feedmixer" project, a php system that would do what LJ does in mixing feed entries into a single place, only more like JavaBlogs, it would mix multiple feeds into a single RSS feed, then CSS, XSL, and Ajax can be used to read it in blog style OR you can get them into a single place in Thunderbird.
Re:depends on the feed (Score:1)
Re:depends on the feed (Score:2)
though really its the ti
Re:depends on the feed (Score:1)
Re:depends on the feed (Score:3, Interesting)
feeds that are blogs are meant to be read in blog style, even if i'm reading them through my own (livejournal-driven) aggregated UI rather than going to each site individually (becausing remembering to visit all my bookmarks sucks -- let my aggregator visit my bookmarks
reminds me of USENET (Score:3, Funny)
Re:reminds me of USENET (Score:1)
Although (obviously) this time it is (mostly) pull, there is no (common) archive, and if you're away for a month you (may) lose a lot of "postings." (I'm not sure if some aggregators will keep items indefinitely even if they are removed from the feed, but I am pretty sure that referred content won't always stay around).
Cheers,
Ashley.
Email clients suck (Score:1, Offtopic)
Long live Google.
Re:Email clients suck (Score:2)
Re:Email clients suck (Score:2)
I still like pluggable authentication modules, virtual memory, and signals -- you know, stuff that's been around for decades that people are only starting to attempt to reimplement in JavaScript.
Fusemail does this (Score:2)
1. Faster to forward articles of interest
2. One interface to deal with reading text content
3. IMAP shows articles read / unread and supports flaggging, marking of messages
I'm sure I could do this with another program / web site. Why would I want to?
I long for the day when someone with a brain (Score:1)
Oh you mean... (Score:1)
Re:And of course... (Score:1)
And everything old is new again (Score:3, Funny)
What about RSS feeds for Yahoo Groups (Score:1)
Re:What about RSS feeds for Yahoo Groups (Score:2)
Personally I prefer to use Yahoo Groups as mailing lists, filtered appropriately, by changing my group options to "receive individual messages." I can even respond to posts by e-mail without going through the awful web interface.
Isn't this the Oddpost technology? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't this the Oddpost technology? (Score:1)
Don
I never used an RSS Reader-I ever used Opera Mail (Score:2)
And all this has Opera's Mail Reader M2. The Mail sidebar is permanently open and i get informed about new RSS feeds as about new mail while I browse the web.
So it should be. Amen.
PAT
Nononono (Score:1)
The only sad thing is it streamlined my web browsing so much that I end up with too much free time at home! ahah
Why would I want to pollute my inbox with
RSS2Email (Score:2)
Great little app.
Set it up as a cron, use your normal email filters to sort all the RSS feeds.
the Newsreader is reinvented? (Score:1)
Oh, oh.... wait.... wait... (Score:2)
It's a news aggregator which uses a network so we could call it UseNet News! how cool would that be?
Why not take it a step further... (Score:3, Interesting)
This would solve many problems associated with regular email IMHO. Instead of receiving dozens of unsolicited emails a {Day,Week,Month}, why not have a system that enables a person to setup an RSS feed intended only for one user.
For example, Alice gives Bob a link to a feed that only Bob knows about which is encrypted, and only Bob can read and subscribe to. Alice adds another feed for Carol, Dave, ad nauseum. If multiple recipients are required for an email, the client updates the feeds for the intended recipients only. A similar concept could be applied to workgroups, each recipient in a workgroup has the same key, enabling only that group to use the feed.
This would be a great replacement especially in situations where you send email to the same people frequently. And it wouldnt be annoying and disruptive like an IM client, you could read your 'email' feed whenever you want. Just a thought.
Vienna (Score:2, Interesting)
NetNewsWire (Score:1)
WTF (Score:2)
RSS growth is slowing (Score:1)
RSS growth will peak and flatten in 2006, as will blog growth.
http://www.realmeme.com:8080/roller/page/realmeme
Hey, I'm a big fan. (Score:1)
Re:Hey, I'm a big fan. (Score:1)
Re:Hotmail soon to follow? Gmail? (Score:1)
Re:Plus, minus... (Score:2)
It's an RSS reader, not a blog management system.
I think it sucks compared to solutions like Feed On Feeds [shokk.com].
Two things (Score:3, Insightful)
Mmm.. no. The market as a whole dropped yesterday, supposedly because of inflation fears [fortune.com].
i used to respect Yahoo back in the early 90's , now they are just another desperate american advertising company
Well, they are American. I suppose that's good cause to loathe them, if that's your thing. But lately Yahoo has been changing quite a bit. Perhaps you haven't noticed, but after they purchased Flickr [flickr.com], they've been "flickrizing" their apps at a fairly