Get Up 8

Email vs. Feeds

A little plug here for my friend Jeff. He's been working on an email utility called mailpie, a set of command-line programs providing full-text indexing and searching of large email archives. I'm not using it yet, because I've been too lazy to set it up, but it looks pretty cool.

Lately, Jeff and I were discussing the limitations of our approaches to reading our feeds. During a fit of outsourcing, I settled on Google Reader. Jeff continues to prefer to make it tough for advertisers to mine his data, opting for Planet. Like any software, both have minor issues.

I like Google Reader's keyboardable interface. That makes old Unix-heads like me happy. I don't like that old, unread entries don't quietly slip away. There's a lot of pressure from the line on the navigation pane that says, Liberal Rubbish (1000+). It makes me feel bad for not keeping up, and makes reading my feeds seem like work. Probably this could be solved with a Mark as read after some period of time setting, but that currently doesn't exist. I'd like them to expire based on the time-to-live specified by the feed itself. Feeds are by their nature ephemeral, and keeping them around and all up in my fries misses the point. When I look at my feeds, I want to see what's new, not the history of the website back to the beginning of time.

I also feel a little dirty using Google Reader because I know that all my clicks, choice of subscriptions, and entry keywords are being inspected and dissected by Google's army of virtual demographers and adaptive hindbrain delivery scripts, so my brain can be picked apart and sold to advertisers. Nevermind that my browser provides anti-marketing countermeasures; knowing this is going on is irksome.

Yes, blah blah business model. Yes, blah don't be evil blah. Yes, I know my data is not linked back to me individually. I know, I know. I love the power the Google gives me, and I take advantage of it. It just squicks me out sometimes.

Bonus points for the Google's brilliant, intutive, usable AJAX interface, though.

My primary reason for not choosing Planet is essentially a bug: the feeds are cached, and the caches are never cleaned-up, growing to fill the disk space they have available. Lacking the desire to worry about solving this problem, along with going through an offloading phase, during which I started using flickr seriously, along with Google Calendar and Reader, steered me away from Planet.

...So Jeff and I were talking about feeds and readers the other day. Because we both choose mutt as our email clients, with appreciation for its power and flexibility, Jeff said, I should write something like mailpie for feeds. It would put together mbox mailboxes, readable from mutt. As I've been working on the next generation of my feed sidebar-plugins for pyblosxom, I've been thinking about that idea. Here are a few of the things that have crossed my mind.

Pros:

Cons:

The jury's still out. The idea of a text-mode, minimally formatted feed reader is attractive. (Any of you whippersnappers remember Gopher?). The question is how to present the potentially rich set of data with links usefully. Maybe its just a matter of providing a properly configured mutt...

Sun, 15 Jun 2008 11:51