As an investor in an RSS
aggregator (Newsgator - far and away the best of the reader platforms out there; although I suppose I'm biased) I pay attention to how people use syndication services
and how they use, manage, manipulate and read their news and blog feeds. I’ve played around with some of the different
technologies in the space – most of which are variations of the same theme
(very effective for reading individual posts, not as effective for sorting through
large amounts of information).
Today
Adam Rentschler sent me links (here and here) to a couple
of sites that use RSS feeds (and a Google-like measure of what certain news
sources are reporting on) to create a visual map of the news and events that
are being reported on/talked about. The
technology behind this was created by the Hive Group.
To borrow from Adam’s note to
me “creative data representation is cool stuff”
True, but what would be even
cooler would be the ability to create custom data representations. What if you could pick the source data for
the honeycombs (The Hive Group’s term for their way of representing
information)? Have one for your favorite
news sources. Another for blogs. Better yet, one for the hundreds of blogs
that you want to read but never have the chance to. How about a map of all the speech in the
blogsphere (Dave S? Howard K?). It’d be
a fast and effective way to see what people are talking about.
I think you're on to something here. We seem to be a 1 on a scale of 1-100 in terms of the manipulation of blog data. For instance, I was talking with some entrepreneurs the other day about an idea they had for mining consumer intelligence from blogs around new product launches. Intelliseek is doing some stuff around this and obviously Technorati is a candidate, but I think there must be a better way for companies to track the "pulse" of the blogesphere instead of a mere keyword search.
Posted by: Ben Casnocha | March 28, 2005 at 08:39 PM