Google Reader

July 7, 2008

Will and I were discussing whether or not we’d see cable die out, with on demand internet television.  I pointed out that in general, I get all my news from the internet, and very rarely watch television, except via hulu.com.  We then progressed to debating the best way to get a hold of that news.  I tend to use RSS feed bookmarks in my ‘Fox bookmarks bar as seen here.  Will advocates the use of the Google News Reader.  The reason I initially started using the RSS bookmarks was that I simply had no knowledge of the reader.  However, I like having the pull-down menus up among my other frequently hit bookmarks.  This way I can select the feed from any page, see which ones I’ve read or haven’t (only on this computer, though), and check for new ones.  It’s convenient for sites like Digg, where I don’t necessarily want to read every article, and don’t want the Reader app to tell me that there are unread posts.  However, for things I follow very closely like personal blogs and PSD tuts, I like that it tells me when there is an unread recent post.

The reader basically pulls all the data from your various feeds, and puts it all in one place.  Google’s version can be found here.  It then organizes them into folder like sets, similar to gmail’s labels function, and tells you how many unread items there are within each feed.  The strength of the reader comes in centralizing all of that data: you can find anything you need to know from right within that window.  The interface is a little mucky for me, but I’ve only been using it for a couple of hours now.  It’s nice that on the tab it gives you the number of unread posts.  It’s simple to reset all of the posts as read, just a click of the button, and it has an area that gives you all of the unread posts since your last visit, all from within your Google account, so if you need to swap over to your email, it’s as easy as clicking the upper-left-hand-corner link.

From what I’ve found, the reader is a useful tool for pulling everything together, and limiting the amount of places you have to check.  I may be using it more often in the days to come.  The part I find lacking is the ability to navigate to any post within a selected feed from whatever window or tab I might have open at once.  Also, the reader pulls the content right from the website, so you never actually leave the Google interface, which to me limits the access to the websites other content: for instance, on PSD tuts, there’s a photo pool that I like to browse from time to time, which is not available in the individual posts via the reader, but is omnipresent when visiting the posts themselves on the site.

I think I’ll use the reader most often on my iPod Touch.  Since there is no overarching bookmark feature (i.e., the bookmark display bar in Firefox) I can access all my feeds instantly from one site, and I won’t be as worried about visiting the individual sites.  It’s also nice that it’s formatted for a small screen, and thus my browsing is simplified.  However, with powerful computer in hand, I enjoy the ability to use it.

Entry Filed under: Technology. .


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