Member of the reality-based community of progressive (not anonymous) Massachusetts blogs
I keep an eye on my hit stats via my webhost (Dreamhost.com, I do recommend them). I notice by far the most browser hits on the web server for this site come from FeedReader and Scoop RDF (yesterday, 261 and 97 non-unique hits respectively) and a small amount from other RSS feed readers. (More about RSS feeds.)
It got me thinking…how many people read this blog via RSS readers (or Atom, the other format)? How does that work for you? I’ve considered using feedreaders, but haven’t gotten around to figuring out which I might like best. What do you use and recommend?
I also wonder how many of those RSS hits are from automated news sites of some sort, and how many are from individual readers. I mean, that many people can’t be reading my blather every day, can they? Not that I’ll ever know the answer. The server stats don’t get that specific.
Well, however you read this site, thanks for coming, and I hope you continue to find it interesting. Also thanks to the commentators who have corrected me, sparked lively debate, and allowed me to refine my arguments. I really do appreciate it. I’ll continue to endeavor to be worthy.
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July 13th, 2005 at 12:32 am
I’m the Feedreader guy… and my feeds are all set to refresh every 5 minutes (I’m gonna change it so it refreshes less often, since I have no need for it and it just increases peoples’ bandwidth costs)…
Feedreader is ok, but I wouldn’t recommend it. I have had a few problems where 10 posts randomly get marked unread when I’ve already read them, also some problems when the reader has to parse edited posts with the original posts that were already downloaded.
My biggest problem with Feedreader is that it’s unable to sort posts. Two of my feeds are Bittorrent tracker posts, to download music, movies, tv shows, etc. One of them I only use to download the Daily Show and the other only for movies. However, Feedreader is unable to sort out the music or only allow the Daily Show, and it’s not very customizable.
But in terms of convenience, you can’t beat it. I used to have to go to the blogs I read when I went on the computer and find the newest posts and move up the page reading the posts, now it shows me which I have and haven’t read. I still use Feedreader because it’s open source and I prefer open source software, and because I know can probably find a plugin that will allow me to sort posts some day.