partiallydisassembled.net

About Reader

2009-05-05 09:18:27

I said that comments on Reader really suck in my last post, and I want to explain why. Google Reader has changed my life (this is no big statement; lots of things change my life; including whichever bastard on one of the many overcrowded trains I catch coughed on me and gave me this cold; keeping me home from work and thus with too much time to blog inanities, like this one). Reader started out as a feed aggregator. Technologically, this means checking the timestamps of a predetermined list of remote files, and downloading any that have changed. The point of which was to keep up-to-date with news (real news, from newspapers; tech news, from procrastination web sites; or friends' news, from blogs). When Reader was released, there were hundreds of desktop applications that did exactly the same thing -- Reader's advantage was that it followed you between desktops, being online. But it's so much more now. Reader is how I keep in contact with friends. People of my generation don't actually want to talk to their friends, or even SMS or email them. That kind of contact is far too personal and touchy. All we need is some way of indicating that we thought about each other, if only for a moment. This can be achieved on Facebook with a nudge, on MySpace with a chain letter, on Twitter with a 140-character brain broadcast, and on Reader by sharing something. To each their own (or, in the case of some people I know, all of them). When you share an article on Reader, you're telling them, "Hey, I saw this and think you should read it." Which is how most conversations go anyway. Except for Austin, who mostly shares pictures of animals, but mostly talks about compilers. Originally you could only share articles from feeds; typically ones you'd subscribed to. But some time recently Google added the ability to share any URL with a single click. This has changed my friend's sharing habits from keeping each other up-to-date on the few blogs that we don't subscribe to in common, to keeping each other up-to-date with what we're doing all day. For example, based on Sofie's shares from yesterday, I can surmise that she was passing the time by reading about penises and Star Trek cakes. This tells me much more about Sofie than I could ever have learned by actually talking to her. And then there's commenting. In response to a friend's share, you can write something back. Usually "hahaha", with the number of "ha"'s being proportional to the amount of enjoyment you received. This comment is then viewable by any other friend looking at that shared item. Occasionally one of us tries to start some discourse via the comments. Say, if you didn't agree with the shared article, you might comment, "lolz no way ps3 is teh better than poniez". But this is where it all breaks down, because anyone who's already read that item will not see your comment, unless they specifically go looking for it. There isn't even a flag or a number to indicate that articles you've read have since been commented on. At the moment Reader is like a party where everyone is telling jokes, and everyone is hearing the jokes, but no-one can hear all the laughter, which is isolated. If comments were integrated into the main view -- say, given first-class status as another article, then we'd be able to continue the discussion past a single retort, and have a real argument. It makes me think of Slashdot, except that the posting of articles and comments would be restricted to just the people on your friends list. It's what I want! (Side note: apparently whatever spell-check dictionary I have loaded on my Mac at the moment understands "MySpace" but not "Facebook" or "Google". Figure that one out!)

Biccy writes:

I like the "Except for Austin" part :3

Austin writes:

I try my best... So I've been thinking of Hugh Laurie, goats, and tapeworms recently... cool! I think you should file a bug, as it is one, imo.

Austin writes:

Also, there is the "Comment View" at the top, that does go bold if there are new comments. But that isn't enough to be usable.

Alex Holkner writes:

Er, my comment view is on the left, and it doesn't go bold ever.
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