Interesting question posited by Fred Wilson on Techmeme as a curator of feeds. That is, that it does such a good job at curating memes that he hasn’t read many (if any) news / blog feeds these days. The problem, as he sees it, is that it can be “gamed” as any system can, which can in turn lead to a manipulation of perception.
I love Techmeme as much as the next blogger, and I don’t really get fussed about the Leaderboard (primarily because I have never been on it, although there are other indicators that perhaps no one is really listening to my overblown gasbaggery anyway), but a couple thoughts on this:
Its good for what it does: and what it does is provide a snapshot of news and conversations for the past 24 h or so. The problem is that it pre-picks which conversations to monitor. As Dave Winer noted, its possible to get included into those conversations pretty easily, but its not a given to just link to the headlining meme. Nevertheless, there are a host of bottom-sucking morays — such as myself — who like to participate in the discussion, but who that is tends to be predictable.
It could get gamed: as any complex system can. One way would be to get several blogs — see bottom-sucking morays above, or better yet, a leaderboarder — to point to a single story or post. Now, I haven’t yet seen anything which even suggests that this has happened, but its possible. At one point I was writing for Deep Jive Interests, the Blog Herald and Problogger (earlier this year). I was tempted to try it, but what would be the point in that?
It makes me lazy: as a tech blogger who needs to review a wide variety of sources, it makes me really, really lazy. And this is a function of its leaderboard, as it naturally weights some blogs / news sources more than others. That’s why TechCrunch can headline a story in and of itself without any pointing discussions to it, irrespective of its intrinsic worth as a story (I mean, this would be difficult to measure without any specific metric, such as inbound links).
So for upcoming stories and a wide breadth of stuff, I like Blogrunner. It lists stories as they come out (such as Fred Wilson’s post, which I picked up within 30 minutes of him posting it), whereas Techmeme has a few hour (or few day) lead in. Secondly, its own list of blogs / news sites that it scans seems larger, so it gives the appearance of a real diversity of opinion (whether or not such a thing actually exists in the blogosphere is to be debated for another time). The problem with Blogrunner, though, is its layout in that its not as easy to scan the page for the headlines you want.
But as for my own leading question — have “curated feeds” stopped you from reading RSS feeds? I don’t know. Let’s talk about it, because I can see how for some, it might. There’s a lot of news out there, and it takes time to build a good OPML file (why there’s no easy way to search for these things and share them is beyond me), in addition to reading it all. I’ll admit that I’ve caved into the lazy temptation of getting others to “curate” their feeds for me, whether it be Scoble, Blogrunner or Techmeme.
Could I be getting a skewed view of things? Of course.
But I think as long as I _know_ they’re skewed … well, I think that’s all that really matters, doesn’t it?


November 19th, 2007 at 10:02 am | Permalink
Honestly? I wouldn’t read Techmeme if my job(s) didn’t require me to. It’s a great tool; I’m not trying to take anything away from it. But I like to read my feeds one at a time, in the order as they appear.
November 19th, 2007 at 12:44 pm | Permalink
I still read about 800 feeds every day and put the best to my link blog at http://www.google.com/reader/shared/14480565058256660224
November 19th, 2007 at 1:02 pm | Permalink
I agree with some comments that sites like popurls.com are a real alternative to overcrowded rss readers.
November 19th, 2007 at 1:20 pm | Permalink
For what it’s worth - I still do my primary blog reading in Google Reader (I just came here from there). But I do admit to reading techmeme too, sometimes to get ideas for blog posts if I don’t find any through the reader.
But yes - your post makes me think that I ought to be paying more attention to feeds and less on what’s hot on techmeme.
November 19th, 2007 at 2:15 pm | Permalink
Over the past few months, my Google Reader line-up has really evolved. It has expanded but now includes mnay different kind of blogs other than technology, which has made reading it more interesting. I still read & enjoy Techmeme but I have found the same old faces (including my own) there on a regular basis.
November 21st, 2007 at 10:33 am | Permalink
Hey Tony .. I’m the human behind blogrunner. Thanks for all the nice stuff you’ve been saying about the site.. I’m not really into the whole techmeme vs blogrunner thing. First of all, I’m a tm fan. Secondly, although there’s some overlap, I think they differ more than they’re alike. And in general I’d say, let’s have more techmemes and blogrunners and all sorts of services that remix an reorganize the web and that pipe information into each other. Let the meta-aggregators bloom. Re. the curated vs feeds discussion, blogrunner tries to have it both ways by also providing a view that basically just streams stuff as it comes in. I use google reader all the time though for stuff that is not time sensitive. The whole river of news concept is a great start but I wish google reader had more options to remix content and grab stuff that I didn’t necessarily subscribe to but that is closely related to what I’m scanning.
November 21st, 2007 at 11:42 am | Permalink
I think with google reader and all the feeds I subscribe too I really dont need techmeme.