Dave Winer: how RSS can break through

Dave Winer has an interesting post on how RSS can break through. I think the thesis is wrong. It already HAS broken through. I asked the audience at LIFT last week (not all bloggers, either) how many use RSS and 80% of the hands went up. Maybe the question should be “how do we get the other 20%?”

I’m off for the rest of the day. Might be on later. Go Seattle!!

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    80 percent of who?

    Come on, man — how many people use the web, and how many people use RSS.

    On your flight home, walk up and down the aisle with a notebook and ask people if they use RSS, and tell us what the number is. And even that is not representative, people who travel by air between Europe and North America are not your average web users.

    Did you take any stats courses in college Scoble? If not, we need to have a talk, asap. “;->”

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    80 percent of who?

    Come on, man — how many people use the web, and how many people use RSS.

    On your flight home, walk up and down the aisle with a notebook and ask people if they use RSS, and tell us what the number is. And even that is not representative, people who travel by air between Europe and North America are not your average web users.

    Did you take any stats courses in college Scoble? If not, we need to have a talk, asap. “;->”

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    And I said “bust” through, not “break” through.

    And if Dare-O is tuned in, this is part of what really happened when I visited in April 2005. I told them over and over that they weren’t going far enough.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    And I said “bust” through, not “break” through.

    And if Dare-O is tuned in, this is part of what really happened when I visited in April 2005. I told them over and over that they weren’t going far enough.

  • http://avc.blogs.com/ fred

    when 80% of the hands go up when you ask the people in the local supermarket, then it will have broken through

  • Anonymous

    These hand raising stats you always quote about how mainstream RSS is are highly inaccurate. Please stop.

    RSS is still not mainstream and the average person is still not aware of it.

  • http://avc.blogs.com fred

    when 80% of the hands go up when you ask the people in the local supermarket, then it will have broken through

  • Anonymous

    These hand raising stats you always quote about how mainstream RSS is are highly inaccurate. Please stop.

    RSS is still not mainstream and the average person is still not aware of it.

  • http://www.ms-inc.net/ Jon Schwartz

    I certainly don’t think RSS has “broken through” yet – what you’re doing rocks, Scoble, but you’re not objective on this point. :) I also haven’t had time to look at what Dave or IE7 or other software have done lately with RSS. My main use of RSS is to add feeds and see posting titles on my home page, and when they interest me, click and read. I submit to you that that level of usage is a lot more main-stream-realistic than the edge cases of RSSphiles who have 100 feeds in their Blog reader software – particularly over time. Are those edge cases really going to be reading 100 feeds a day next year, and the year after. The home page headline usage has potential as a mainstream user scenario – which is what is really required for RSS to break throught – but the whole experience of finding, selecting, and adding a feed to my home page needs to be a lot easier to do before it will be a mainstream scenario – especially finding. Another scenario which would, I think, break it into the mainstream is for an automated post aggregator which works like news.google.com. It bypasses focus on particular blogs (news outlets) and instead focuses on specific topics-of-interest. RSS is not what I’m working on right now – we shipped a VS.NET aggregator almost a year ago and moved on to other things since – so perhaps some of you are already working on these scenarios, or have examples to point us too. I’d like to see them. I do think the browser integration idea is fairly obvious and could be good, so I will find some time to look at IE7. Anyone know of FireFox work in this area?

  • http://www.ms-inc.net Jon Schwartz

    I certainly don’t think RSS has “broken through” yet – what you’re doing rocks, Scoble, but you’re not objective on this point. :) I also haven’t had time to look at what Dave or IE7 or other software have done lately with RSS. My main use of RSS is to add feeds and see posting titles on my home page, and when they interest me, click and read. I submit to you that that level of usage is a lot more main-stream-realistic than the edge cases of RSSphiles who have 100 feeds in their Blog reader software – particularly over time. Are those edge cases really going to be reading 100 feeds a day next year, and the year after. The home page headline usage has potential as a mainstream user scenario – which is what is really required for RSS to break throught – but the whole experience of finding, selecting, and adding a feed to my home page needs to be a lot easier to do before it will be a mainstream scenario – especially finding. Another scenario which would, I think, break it into the mainstream is for an automated post aggregator which works like news.google.com. It bypasses focus on particular blogs (news outlets) and instead focuses on specific topics-of-interest. RSS is not what I’m working on right now – we shipped a VS.NET aggregator almost a year ago and moved on to other things since – so perhaps some of you are already working on these scenarios, or have examples to point us too. I’d like to see them. I do think the browser integration idea is fairly obvious and could be good, so I will find some time to look at IE7. Anyone know of FireFox work in this area?

  • Maneesh

    My roommate graduated 3 years ago as a computer engineer. He’s worked at two tech companies including IBM. He’s a typical computer geek that likes building his own computers and makes websites on the side. He doesn’t even know what RSS is.

  • Maneesh

    My roommate graduated 3 years ago as a computer engineer. He’s worked at two tech companies including IBM. He’s a typical computer geek that likes building his own computers and makes websites on the side. He doesn’t even know what RSS is.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    Jon did you read my piece? I tried to explain how the neophyte user can and will get 100 feeds without having to subscribe to 100 feeds. Maybe I need to say it more directly.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    Jon did you read my piece? I tried to explain how the neophyte user can and will get 100 feeds without having to subscribe to 100 feeds. Maybe I need to say it more directly.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    Maneesh, I find that when I tell people on airplanes that I blog, most of them don’t know what I’m talking about even though the word is mentioned several times in every TV news broadcast these days. And RSS, as far as I know has never been talked about in mainstream broadcast news, and rarely in print.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    Maneesh, I find that when I tell people on airplanes that I blog, most of them don’t know what I’m talking about even though the word is mentioned several times in every TV news broadcast these days. And RSS, as far as I know has never been talked about in mainstream broadcast news, and rarely in print.

  • http://www.ms-inc.net/ Jon Schwartz

    My last point is challenging enough to all of us as RSS publishers, as well as all of us as RSS consumers, that I feel like I need to emphasize it. I think mainstream users are going to be a lot more interested in topics-of-interest than in feeds-of-interest. No, that’s not a good thing for feed branding or for blogger branding. But is it true? And what do we do about it, as the technologists who will make it happen, and as publishers who RSS, and as consumers who might like that way of using/finding interesting RSS content?

  • http://www.ms-inc.net Jon Schwartz

    My last point is challenging enough to all of us as RSS publishers, as well as all of us as RSS consumers, that I feel like I need to emphasize it. I think mainstream users are going to be a lot more interested in topics-of-interest than in feeds-of-interest. No, that’s not a good thing for feed branding or for blogger branding. But is it true? And what do we do about it, as the technologists who will make it happen, and as publishers who RSS, and as consumers who might like that way of using/finding interesting RSS content?

  • http://www.ms-inc.net/ Jon Schwartz

    I did read it, Dave, and I certainly like your emphases on easy and on centralized. I guess I’m just wanting us all to push past the concept of feeds as being the focus of user interest, to the concept of post/news topics as being the focus of user interest.

  • http://www.ms-inc.net Jon Schwartz

    I did read it, Dave, and I certainly like your emphases on easy and on centralized. I guess I’m just wanting us all to push past the concept of feeds as being the focus of user interest, to the concept of post/news topics as being the focus of user interest.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    Jon, I’m not talking about section 2, I’m talking about section 1.

  • http://scripting.wordpress.com/ Dave Winer

    Jon, I’m not talking about section 2, I’m talking about section 1.

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  • http://www.spazidigitali.com/ Luca Mearelli

    Reading lists can be useful also for the expert/RSSphiles, if nothing else, for discovering starting points for specific subjects (away from thier ususal interests).

  • http://www.spazidigitali.com Luca Mearelli

    Reading lists can be useful also for the expert/RSSphiles, if nothing else, for discovering starting points for specific subjects (away from thier ususal interests).

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  • Anonymous

    I think Fred Wildon’s, that RSS could improve on a lot of what is currently done via email is spot on. “RSS has to become brain-dead simple to use.” Certainly. I do think we can consider RSS (as an umbrella term) adopted, though it hasn’t really filtered through to the general public yet.

    Dave’s first point, “It must be easy to find relevant feeds” is reasonable. But the answer does most definitely *not* lie with centralised subscription.

    The web is a distributed system, centralisation runs counter to its healthy development. Web, no, *Internet* 101. I’m actually a little surprised at the suggestion – the primary benefit of what Dave calls reading lists is that the subscription data is on the web, accessible over http, file export/import not required. Pushing such data into a centralised silo undermines those benefits.

  • http://dannyayers.com Danny

    I think Fred Wildon’s, that RSS could improve on a lot of what is currently done via email is spot on. “RSS has to become brain-dead simple to use.” Certainly. I do think we can consider RSS (as an umbrella term) adopted, though it hasn’t really filtered through to the general public yet.

    Dave’s first point, “It must be easy to find relevant feeds” is reasonable. But the answer does most definitely *not* lie with centralised subscription.

    The web is a distributed system, centralisation runs counter to its healthy development. Web, no, *Internet* 101. I’m actually a little surprised at the suggestion – the primary benefit of what Dave calls reading lists is that the subscription data is on the web, accessible over http, file export/import not required. Pushing such data into a centralised silo undermines those benefits.

  • http://blogs.booksoft.com/alex Alex Black

    I have to agree with most of the comments here, RSS is not mainstream, most people haven’t heard of it let alone used it. Most people wouldn’t actually care about RSS itself.

    Once its in the browsers and they can subscribe to blogs and feeds easily, then it may catch on, but they still won’t know what RSS is, or need to!

  • http://blogs.booksoft.com/alex Alex Black

    I have to agree with most of the comments here, RSS is not mainstream, most people haven’t heard of it let alone used it. Most people wouldn’t actually care about RSS itself.

    Once its in the browsers and they can subscribe to blogs and feeds easily, then it may catch on, but they still won’t know what RSS is, or need to!

  • http://phillip.wordpress.com/ phillip

    instead of a poll at a tech conference on who knows about rss (it’s reasonable to expect the attendees to index high for rss awareness) – it might be interesting to ask: who knows of…

    …an easy way for people to add the things they want to read about on a regular basis, to a familiar interface (web pages)?

    …an easy way for publishers and editors to provide high quality lists of things their audience wants (reading lists on web pages)?

    or perhaps ask how they think something like this would work, look, etc..?

  • http://phillip.wordpress.com/ phillip

    instead of a poll at a tech conference on who knows about rss (it’s reasonable to expect the attendees to index high for rss awareness) – it might be interesting to ask: who knows of…

    …an easy way for people to add the things they want to read about on a regular basis, to a familiar interface (web pages)?

    …an easy way for publishers and editors to provide high quality lists of things their audience wants (reading lists on web pages)?

    or perhaps ask how they think something like this would work, look, etc..?

  • Chris

    The other 20 per cent? Just ask him.

  • Chris

    The other 20 per cent? Just ask him.

  • Anonymous

    PS. Your browser might pass the info that you want to subscribe to feedX to Yahoo! or whoever. But we have protocols that could automatically ensure the copy at MSN, Bloglines, FeedDemon or wherever remains in sync.

    The easiest way to implement this would be simple polling, *exactly* like RSS reading, though that would imply per-user choice of master service. But smarter ways for distributed maintenance of subscription lists are available through WebDAV, Atom protocol, RDF diff/patch or for that matter MS’s Simple Sharing Extensions.

  • http://dannyayers.com Danny

    PS. Your browser might pass the info that you want to subscribe to feedX to Yahoo! or whoever. But we have protocols that could automatically ensure the copy at MSN, Bloglines, FeedDemon or wherever remains in sync.

    The easiest way to implement this would be simple polling, *exactly* like RSS reading, though that would imply per-user choice of master service. But smarter ways for distributed maintenance of subscription lists are available through WebDAV, Atom protocol, RDF diff/patch or for that matter MS’s Simple Sharing Extensions.

  • http://www.zoliblog.com/ Zoli Erdos

    I know I’ll be labeled as “elitist” for saying this. Believe me, I am not.

    Yes, I know the 80% is a skewed number, it’s 80% of the web-savy, blogger, conference-goer geeky minority who were in the 21st century long before the rest of us:-)

    But let’s be real and ask ourselves of the purpose of our commnication. More often than not we don’t want to address the entire population of Planet Earth:-) More often than not we have a target audience … and chances are in many cases that target will be the innovator crowd, in which case 80% is not that bad.

    OK, you can throw stones now :-)

  • http://www.zoliblog.com Zoli Erdos

    I know I’ll be labeled as “elitist” for saying this. Believe me, I am not.

    Yes, I know the 80% is a skewed number, it’s 80% of the web-savy, blogger, conference-goer geeky minority who were in the 21st century long before the rest of us:-)

    But let’s be real and ask ourselves of the purpose of our commnication. More often than not we don’t want to address the entire population of Planet Earth:-) More often than not we have a target audience … and chances are in many cases that target will be the innovator crowd, in which case 80% is not that bad.

    OK, you can throw stones now :-)

  • http://www.zoliblog.com/ Zoli Erdos

    Damn, I forgot to CoComment this :-(

  • http://www.zoliblog.com Zoli Erdos

    Damn, I forgot to CoComment this :-(

  • Farooq

    you know Scoble…I introduced a friend of mine to RSS and web-based aggregators…the REASON i think RSS hasn’t taken off is because it’s a pain in the ass to subscribe to feeds…

    I used Windows Live as a basis for my friend and it took me a hell lot of pain just to help him subscribe to some important feeds for him…try it yourself…

    this is more like a critique on Windows Live…please ask these guys to make all of this simpler…add content is useless in some ways and if you have more than 20 subscribed feeds, the interface just becomes clunky and hard to navigate…

    btw, i still managed to start him off on Windows Live ;)

  • Farooq

    you know Scoble…I introduced a friend of mine to RSS and web-based aggregators…the REASON i think RSS hasn’t taken off is because it’s a pain in the ass to subscribe to feeds…

    I used Windows Live as a basis for my friend and it took me a hell lot of pain just to help him subscribe to some important feeds for him…try it yourself…

    this is more like a critique on Windows Live…please ask these guys to make all of this simpler…add content is useless in some ways and if you have more than 20 subscribed feeds, the interface just becomes clunky and hard to navigate…

    btw, i still managed to start him off on Windows Live ;)

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  • http://acidzebra.blogspot.com/ Michiel

    I think with RSS integrated in IE7 (I gather they will be called just ‘feeds’, whatever) it will finally reach the sheep when they go through their upgrade cycle.

    Until then its a fringe thing, like, well, blogging.
    So once again you are an edge case ;)

  • http://acidzebra.blogspot.com Michiel

    I think with RSS integrated in IE7 (I gather they will be called just ‘feeds’, whatever) it will finally reach the sheep when they go through their upgrade cycle.

    Until then its a fringe thing, like, well, blogging.
    So once again you are an edge case ;)

  • http://www.conchbbs.com/ Scott Royall

    I think Dave totally misses the point. Look at the total number of computers in use, and then the total number of computers on the Internet. Sure, those numbers are very fuzzy, but they are solid enough to show that Net usage is still a minority activity. I’ve noticed that people in the technology industries tend to greatly over-estimate the deployment of the fruits of their labor even throughout the US. The neat stuff Silicon Valley and San Francisco saw five years ago is just now becoming popular elsewhere.

    Given that “break” in technology adoption, I’d say there’s another one even among Internet users. Those who perceive a need for the types of services being offered via RSS have found RSS. The rest have lives outside the Net, and chiefly use it for email and maybe pay bills. They’d say they have no interest in RSS.

    Dave, you’d starve trying to find Macs throughout the South also. They do exist, but are quite rare.

  • http://www.conchbbs.com Scott Royall

    I think Dave totally misses the point. Look at the total number of computers in use, and then the total number of computers on the Internet. Sure, those numbers are very fuzzy, but they are solid enough to show that Net usage is still a minority activity. I’ve noticed that people in the technology industries tend to greatly over-estimate the deployment of the fruits of their labor even throughout the US. The neat stuff Silicon Valley and San Francisco saw five years ago is just now becoming popular elsewhere.

    Given that “break” in technology adoption, I’d say there’s another one even among Internet users. Those who perceive a need for the types of services being offered via RSS have found RSS. The rest have lives outside the Net, and chiefly use it for email and maybe pay bills. They’d say they have no interest in RSS.

    Dave, you’d starve trying to find Macs throughout the South also. They do exist, but are quite rare.

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  • Jason Hawryluk

    Even the idea that “RSS” will be known to the general public baffles me. I don’t think you will “ever” be able to get a real hands up on who knows what RSS is or who uses it. It’s not a product ! This is like asking anyone that uses a computer their definition of TPC/IP. It’s just never going to happen.

    A mainstream user cares only about the results, not the underlying format of those results. As much as we would like otherwise RSS is a format. It’s not viewed as xml in all it’s glory. I would think the question will be, do you know what news’s feed’s are. Of course this is talking about a general none technical consumer.

    Sure a web site admin/creator or a hard core blogger will know, but that’s as far as it will ever get until allot more time passes, or more implementations take shape.

    What are we doing useful with RSS besides syndication of news ?

    I don’t see an application/standard that takes all hardware/vendor driver/software update feeds and updates your computer when updates are available. Why aren’t these people using it for deployment or patches/upgrades etc.. Fit’s quite nicely. The future of RSS is large we all see that. However it need’s different implementations and uses. Ton’s of stuff can be done with it, not just blog/comments/news stuff. Until we see these different implementations come out, I can’t see that happening.

    We tend to hide the implementation details to give a consumer what they want. Information.