Sep 18

I wish that I had found CoComments a month ago. TheCaymanHost turned me on to this, and it’s going to save my bacon. I can tell already.

CoComment

In the past week I have posted twice saying “I can’t remember where I saw this, but blah blah blah.” (Referring to a place that I commented, but didn’t bookmark.) My bookmarks are cluttered enough, and now I’m on a commenting rampage, and I can’t bookmark every single site I visit.

CoComment uses an unobtrusive Firefox plugin to keep track of the blogs you visit and the comments you leave. You can also delete references to places you know you don’t want to return to or to track.

*EDIT* You do not have to use Firefox, but I think it’s by far the easiest. Non-Firefox users have an option called Bookmarklet as explained on the CoComment website. *END EDIT*

I’ve only just started using it, and I tell ya, I think it’s the niftiest thing since RSS readers. If you join up, drop me a friend invite! My username is Jayne .

Oh and why am I such a comment ditz these days? Because I ran across a blog (umm, I can’t remember where…. see what I mean?) where someone was giving blog advice and he gave some “blogwork” to all his readers to leave 20 comments on other blogs per day. (I took this to mean NEW blogs… not ones already on your own blogroll or that you regularly visit.)

So I decided to keep track of how many comments I leave, and to try to leave 20 per day per blog I run (which thankfully at this point is just two).

Holy guacamole. It’s harder than I thought! I really thought I was already leaving that many, but it turns out I couldn’t possibly have been. I was probably reading 40 blogs, but only commenting on 3-4 of them.

The experiment I’m running is to do this for a week and see if it raises the traffic I get and the amount of comments my own posts get. So I’ll keep at it and let you know the results next week.

And now, in the meantime, I’ve got a little helper to remind me where I leave all these comments, and the many worthwhile blogs out there.

Sep 10

Which is the best online feed reader?

Recently I added feedburner technology to both this blog and Bitter Women after reading an article by Becky at Preblogging which stated: “One recent thing I’ve noticed on blogs that I read is that they don’t offer or promote their email feeds. You have to remember that not everyone who visits your blog will be so technologically advanced as you, and may not have a RSS reader service that they use. For these people, FeedBurner’s Email Subscription is the way to go.”

I had never really paid attention to all the free web-based feed readers before, since I’ve been perfectly content to use the in-browser RSS readers… but lately I’ve been reading a LOT of blogs, so was up for finding something a little easier to organise and to see if there was any hope of a reader that would keep me from going cross-eyed.

I decided to look at five: Google Reader, News Gator , Bloglines , and (I had others listed here, but after looking into them, didn’t feel they were worth the time or space to review.)


Google Reader: The biggest problem here was simply that I found it difficult to do the simplest thing, which was change the name of a folder (can’t be done) and rename a folder (I had to google it, which is an amusing coincidence.) I found their help files incomplete and unsearchable.On the plus side, it was pretty, and if you’re familiar with Google already, being a gmail user, you would probably find it intuitive. However, non gmail users might flounder a touch, like I did, with the basics. Questions like: what the heck is “Add a Star”?Others have seen huge growth with GoogleReader, and Problogger suggests that their market share is growing enormously, based on their own statistics.

google_reader.gif

Score: 80% = Grade B

Looks: 8/10 - Nothing to complain about, but looks exactly like everything else Google has ever made.
Ease of Use: 8/10 - Reading and adding easy, organising a tad tedious at first
Extra Features: 8/10 - I suppose I gave it a non-perfect score because I felt that in this case “extra” = “useless”. You can read your “stats”… not of your own site but of your reading habits, “star” things, which puts them in a separate folder. This is useful, perhaps, for articles you want to come back to later, but I find I use my browser’s bookmarking for that, and having to look in two places would be twice the work.

Some resources on Google Reader:


NewsGator: I was impressed with the looks of NewsGator… very pretty with lots of ooh and ahh buttons and I found it very easy to use. The downside here for me was a big one though: the slick ajax-y features took a while to load. When I’m in blog-reading mode, I’m in short-attention-span mode, and waiting for, well anything, makes me twitch.

NewsGator

Score: 76% = Grade C+

Looks: 9/10 - Slick and fancy. Gorgeous. Downside: Inserts Google Ads between posts you’re reading.
Ease of Use: 5/10 - The slow loading speed really bothered me and sometimes it would open up popup windows with extra information… great, except they weren’t moveable or sizeable, and they ran off the screen so I couldn’t read everything in them.
Extra Features: 9/10 - Some looked great: the plugin for Firefox and IE, and the tools for bloggers were nifty, such as being able to add ratings to your site. Some were silly, like a newsgator screensaver. I can’t imagine the meeting in which that sounded like a good idea.

Some resources on Newsgator:

  • Honestly, I couldn’t find any links to recommend, but the upside is that their help system is excellent, and includes tutorials, screenshots, and detailed explainations and walkthrus.

Bloglines:

Bloglines RSS reader

Score: 83% - Grade B
Looks: 8/10 - Suitable, but nothing to write home about. The layout was simple and clear and easy to navigate.
Ease of Use: 8/10 - Easy to sign up, easy to use. I didn’t like the way they grouped posts together. I found it harder to determine what was new than when I was looking at Google Reader.
Extra Features: 9/10 -Frankly the selection was dizzying, and I don’t want to take the space to go into all the features they have (A few are drag-and-drop feed management, news, notifier, even weather in their new Bloglines Beta), but Bloglines is much more than just a feed reader. This could be a plus or a minus, depending on what you’re looking for. I give it high marks, because I think it’s likely those looking for a free online RSS service would like to be able to do a lot of things in one place.

Some resources on Bloglines:


Summary: Now this is where I find myself scratching my head. I went through and compared all the sites, and had determined beforehand I would use the one that got the highest score. But when I look back, I gave Bloglines a higher score, but find myself acknowledging that I would actually use Google Reader over Bloglines.Why? Bloglines scored higher on extra features, but I doubt I’d use them. Google Reader scored lower on ease of use because I had a bit of difficulty finding help on how to do some basic things… but… now that I know how to do those basic things, I just like it better for intangible reasons. Maybe the familiarity of the interface was more appealing than I realised at first glance.But build me something with the sexiness of Newsgator, the speed and easy layout of GoogleReader, and the extra features of Bloglines, and I’m there.