Field Notes Inside an Integrated Communications Agency

RSS Bankruptcy

For one reason or another, I neglected my feedreader between 1pm on Friday the 18th and around 7pm on Tuesday the 22nd. During this unintended vacation, nearly a thousand posts were published and were waiting for me in Google Reader.

I thought about that number for a second, then clicked "All Items" and then "Read." There was no way I was going to get through them. Why even try?

Up to this point, I've declared RSS bankruptcy a few times. Toss 'em out and move on. Blogs and news alerts find eyes other than mine.

But today I subscribed to another feed. It was different this time though. Normally, I categorize my subscriptions into the following categories:

  • Arbitrarium - Wired , Kottke , Subtraction, Seed Mag, Anil Dash, Venture Beat, Bent Objects, etc.
  • Design - New At Pentagram, Design Observer, I Love Typography, Ace Jet 170 etc.
  • User Experience - Boxes and Arrows, A List Apart, Copyblogger, Findability, Good Experience, etc.
  • Development - Ajaxian, Joel on Software, 456 Berea St, Y! User Interface, etc
  • Clients - various client blogs and feeds
  • Life Logistics - Meetup, Upcoming.org, Gen X Finance, Web Worker Daily, Del.icio.us tagged "toReview", etc.

This time, I added two new categories, bringing the total to eight.

  • Daily
  • Whenever

Now, each feed gets placed in one of the six above, and in on of the two below. If I get backed up, I click into "Whenever" and then click "Read". Dump the fluff. Since probably 95% of the feeds occupy the "Whenever" bucket, I feel better removing just these rather than all of them. 

Or, so I tell myself.

   

  • John Romano 10:32 a.m. Jul 29, 2008

    I never fully recovered from my last RSS bankruptcy. I am now down to a handful of feeds that are MOST important to me. There is just too much to read.

    I now use the "morning paper" test. If I can't get thru my feeds in the time that most people used to read the morning paper, then it's too much. (BTW that is about 25 minutes)

    I also have become ruthless about removing feeds that I don't seem to be reading. I often "want" to read certain feeds, but if I find that I don't then it's gone!

  • Evan 4:38 p.m. Jul 28, 2008

    That sounds like a good idea. I have to declare RSS bankruptcy from time to time, and I agree that you always feel like your missing out on something when you do.

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