A friend (he who shall not be named) said “Why do I want a Bscope in my life?” It’s because of RSS Overload, plain and simple.
Over time, I’ve found that the more blogs I read the more time I spend sifting, sorting, and searching through the whole set. “Where’s that article I was reading the other day……” Because the more online content I read, the more I need a tool to help consume and organize it.
Feed readers I’ve used dutifully download the updates, and yes, they are organized into the categories I’ve specified. But, I have to work my way through each feed one at a time. Rather than displaying all of the updates from my feeds, a Bscope helps me pick it apart. I can select articles such as those with incoming links, outgoing links, or possibly a ‘conversation’ using the Bscope to aid the sifting and sorting process.
For me a Bscope offers a different granularity, much like the finer point in Dennis O’Reillys post, the graph yields a road map to a blog and that helps me navigate through the content. The map shows how the pieces of a blog relate to each other. “The leg-blog is connected to the ankle-blog, the ankle-blog is connected to the foot-blog…..” As is the case with any visual technique: a Bscope shows what is difficult to see by reading textual content and following links. It’s the ‘big picture’ I need to cut through the clutter and guide me to the gold — the path back to the article I was trying to find.
But finding old articles is not enough, I read blogs a group at a time. Whether it’s Technology, Renewable Energy, Politics, Personal Finance, Music, Cooking, Economy, and so on. I want the opportunity to dig through, or mine, a set of blogs to find information, relationships, new blogs that are only visible by performing operations on an entire group of blogs. These new found results of a Bscope mining operation are the gold I’m digging for.
I call this mapping a group of blogs a Bspace. A Bspace let’s me mine the blogosphere the way I see it. Because I want to control and manipulate a set of blogs directly. Operations like: search it, share it, navigate it, email it, and yes RSS it, to find what I’m searching for. It’s my own personal blogspace……and the tools to go with it.
As more and more online content gets published in blogs, the need for a variety of tools to manage groups of RSS feeds becomes essential, not optional. Matt (at 37Signals) makes this point effectively in his Taming the Beast article. If I want to drink from a firehose, I need a B-I-G-G-E-R mouth!
My friend asks “Why a Bscope?” and I say “I can’t manage RSS Overload without a Bscope!”
Back to it…..