colinwalker
colinwalker
Dave Winer wrote that "Every blog should have a Subscribe button." Before the mass adoption of social networks you would have been hard pressed not to find a site with some variant of the RSS icon. Now it's just the "follow us here" badges asking you to go to someone else's pr... colinwalker.blog
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canion
canion

@colinwalker the problem with the subscribe buttons have always been workflow. For non-nerds, it was not apparent what to do with it. Sometimes it would even just load the XML, or try to save the RSS file - and now browsers have dropped what support they did have for RSS.

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frank
frank

@colinwalker The thing with RSS is what happens after you click the button. In Chrome, you get the XML feed. In Firefox a "Choose your reader" dialog. That's too difficult for casual visitors and non-tech people. Facebook/Twitter made it easy. Yay for silo-thinking on that part!

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@frank @canion Absolutely! There needs to be a better, easier way to use the buttons before they become popular again. Social networks let you write and consume in the same UI, that’s why m.b works so well even though you are subscribing to a feed when following someone.

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@vasta It’s such a shame. There has to be a better way.

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amit
amit

@vasta @colinwalker Google's initial attempts (i.e. when it was still in love with RSS - Reader days) did try to solve that. Especially Feedburner provided an easy to understand and follow interface.

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mrkrndvs
mrkrndvs

@colinwalker do you mean something like this boffosocko.com/2016/12/1... from @c

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@mrkrndvs Not so much, more like what happens when you actually click on the subscribe button. As @canion said, now that feed support has largely disappeared from browsers many don’t know what to do with them.

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canion
canion

@colinwalker @mrkrndvs Remember when all the apps supported RSS? Browsers, email clients, everything!

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frank
frank

@mmarfil Are you sure you want users to make a choice between Feed readers? Most of them don't even know what they are, that's why RSS failed in the first place. I'd opt for a in-browser or in-phone solution. Kind of like Podcasts on iOS now.

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frank
frank

@mmarfil You're right, we need the support from the big boys. My experience with RSS has been that even explaining it makes it hard to start, understand ánd keep the usage up. I've written countless articles and gave presentations and workshops on it but it didn't help.

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@mmarfil @frank The only problem is we went through all this before, browsers got on board and various solutions were created only to be dropped when 'social’ became the new shiny. I'm not convinced the major players will want to retread old ground.

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jeremycherfas
jeremycherfas

@colinwalker The major players can go play with themselves, for all I care.

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@colinwalker @vasta thinking about this, an obvious solution is to support a cross-browser in-browser RSS feed reader that one links to on our sites instead of just dumping the RSS feed link. The more universal its use gets, the easier for non-geeks to get used to 'subscribing' to feeds.

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@colinwalker @vasta the alternative is that m.b makes a browser app that lets people subscribe to any feed. If someone feels like commenting, a popup comes that says, "you can make a free account on m.b to comment, which allows 20 free original posts per month, and paid after that" But is that fair to m.b?

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@nitinkhanna That would work. 🤔

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@colinwalker are we thinking along those lines now? I bet Manton isn't!

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@nitinkhanna I was talking about the in-browser solution.

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manton
manton

@nitinkhanna @colinwalker @vasta Interesting discussion! I do want to see improvements here. I thought the rel subscribe idea might be the basis for something too. (Micro.blog sites include a link for it.)

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@colinwalker the in-browser solution can be very easy. We just need to agree on an in-browser app that we all can then direct traffic to. Losses? No sync, no mobile, some have fallen out of development, etc.

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@manton I see the rel subscription on Aaron's site, but it seems very hacky. Perhaps it works perfectly with RSS readers? But like I said to Colin, it would be infinitely better if that button were to work with microblog, or an in-browser RSS reader.

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alongtheray
alongtheray

@nitinkhanna @colinwalker @vasta In lieu of that, as an interim solution I'm wondering if the way with the least friction is to have a Feedly subscribe button that'll automatically add the site to their feeds (and/or set up a new account via their web RSS reader). I prefer Feedbin but I suggest Feedly since it is free and seems to have the tools to make it easiest for users to use/subscribe to on the fly. (P.S. At the moment the Feedly subscribe button is reporting an error, I've reported it to Feedly as I know it's worked earlier).

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@nitinkhanna I would imagine a new service specifically designed rather than a current solution.

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@manton Hmm, I’ll have to take a look at that, I wan't aware it was a thing. Thanks.

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@colinwalker I have half a mind to put up a rather lame PHP tool that would let you use that rel-subscribe thing and pull feeds on the fly...

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@solari my problem with that is exactly as you mentioned. Should it be feedly or feedbin or some other? Why not have a page called "Follow me" with all these links on it? I removed everything like that from my WP blog because most people who know RSS have some way to quickly get to my feed. I know it's a bit of a cop out.

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alongtheray
alongtheray

@nitinkhanna I only suggested Feedly because of that easy to use button, it's free, and it uses their Google/Facebook, etc. account (if preferred) to set up a new account on the fly and has decent web-based reader and apps. I'm thinking what is the least friction to get them in the door?

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colinwalker
colinwalker

@nitinkhanna That would be interesting to see. I need to dig in to how it actually works.

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@solari good point! Yeah, we need to reduce fiction as much as possible!

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In reply to
SimonWoods
SimonWoods

@nitinkhanna @solari It might be worth investigating an agreed-upon widely-used page template for indie blogs that both gives the reduced friction option and the option that involves more work (i.e. reading about RSS, seeing the links to the feeds). There could even be a link to a website that acts as the source of information for this page template; something like how Derek Sivers got the whole Now page idea moving.

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nitinkhanna
nitinkhanna

@simonmumbles hmmm. So like a simple English page for the Indieweb wiki? // @solari

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SimonWoods
SimonWoods

@nitinkhanna @solari Yep that'd be a good place for it.

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oyam
oyam

@nitinkhanna @colinwalker @manton I liked the feed:// protocol alias to http that some used while ago. It’s not semantically great, but it works. Any app that can read feeds can register a handler, so people with feeds are covered. JavaScript (not great, but works) can detect when there are no handlers and you can direct people to a page with explanation or whatever you want. The contr is are in hands of app developers, site owners, and end users, instead of the big boys (aapl, goog, Mozilla)

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