This shall be my final post on xenotrope.diaryland.com.
Why would I ever desert Diaryland? Syndication. Syndication and the
fact that the Diaryland servers have an unfortunate tendency to
rate-limit the number of people who can add new posts at certain
times. And by "certain times", I mean "noon to 6 PM daily".
Diaryland is a fine and functional service, and it more than
adequately serves my needs. No question, it's top-notch for the
purposes of posting UNIX howtos and belittling anonymous people I've
found on the Internet who have a different opinion of certain software
titles than I do.
But let's talk for a moment about syndication. Syndication is just
a fancy word for "has an RSS feed", and RSS is the thing that's
currently making my life easier....
[Cue wavy lines, flashback]
When I was in college, I loved having broadband in my dorm
room because it meant I could check a bunch of websites quickly. I
loved using the Opera web browser because I could index my bookmarks
into folders sort of like regular files, and Opera would let me open
each bookmark in a given folder simultaneously. This neat little
feature would open something like a dozen small windows for all my
favorite bookmarks that changed content on a regular basis. I called
it "The Daily" because it contained a variety of news, webcomics, and
opinion sites that I would insist on seeing daily.
Back to the present.
Sometime in the last few years, somebody got so sick of doing that
himself that he put together a nifty XML format for giving everyone
the opportunity to keep abreast of stuff like webcomics and news sites
and, before they were cool, blogs. It was called RSS and it exists in
several different versions, many of which consider "RSS" to mean
something entirely different than the others.
I got with the times, picked a couple of choice RSS aggregator
programs, and started rebuilding the Daily. I don't call it the Daily
anymore, of course. Craig Kilborn of The Daily Show sort of
ruined that for me. Now, I just call them "my feeds", and they include
blogs of friends, Penny Arcade and other comics, OpenBSD Journal,
Peter David, the infamous exploits of UK's own Belle de Jour, Amorous
Propensities, Robert X. Cringely, Dare Obasanjo, Russell Beattie, and
Time Magazine's top stories, just to name a few. I don't spend half an
hour clicking on bookmarks anymore trying to get updates from all of
these places. I get new updates listed, and if there's no new content,
I don't have to spend the time looking at the old content and
confirming that I've seen it before. Syndication is a big time-saver.
Diaryland, however, has not gotten with the times, though several
competing online blogging resources have deployed RSS feeds for their
users. Blogger.com uses Atom, which is based on RSS, and I am not
willing to discuss the controversial background story for why anyone
saw a need to offshoot RSS and make a new format. I'm using Atom and
you're just going to have to deal with that.
So I've changed my needs: I still need to post boring minutiae
about getting Postfix to speak pig latin, I still need to call down
the righteous wrath of Holy God in Heaven upon anyone who dares to
slander the perfection that is Mozilla Firefox. And I need to
syndicate now.
Why? Why syndicate? It's the golden rule. I like it when I go to
somebody's website, personal or professional, and I see a link to an
RSS feed or an Atom feed. If I like what I see, I'll put that little
link into my aggregator and I'll follow along with whatever they post
there. It's so much more convenient to manually add a feed to RSS
Bandit and have it checked automatically than it is to quickly
bookmark the site with a keystroke and then check it manually day
after day after day. It has gotten to the point where if I like a
website, and I don't find a feed for it, that's points
off. Free-money-and-all-the-cheddar-you-can-eat.com might be the site
of my dreams, but if they don't have a feed, I'm not going to stay
up-to-date with them, simply because doing so must be done by hand.
Having a feed is thus little more than common courtesy. It's not
exactly a huge deal if you read my page once every week or so, but for
the three people who hit it daily wanting new content are wasting a
portion of their limited lifetime checking for it. With a feed, you
can check for updates with a mouse click. Without a feed, you are
required to load the page in a browser and confirm that it's still
yesterday's edition for yourself. Yawn.