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Monday, January 03, 2005

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"...HAVING A HUGE TREEVIEW OF FEEDS THAT ARE CONSTANTLY UPDATING IS WASTEFUL - NOT ONLY DOES IT UNNECESSARILY CONSUME BANDWIDTH, BUT IT ALSO SLOWS DOWN THE APPLICATION."
This is true in this way: more and more sites are trimming their RSS feeds to headlines and/or short descriptions only to combat server drag by RSS readers, thus sending you to their sites anyway, which for some defeats the purpose of RSS. But then, I'm not telling you anything you don't already know.

I use Feedburner for my feed stats. They track the number of individual readers each day using the agent strings and IP addresses to identify unique people.

It's not a perfect method either but better than just counting hits. Anyway out of the 253 people who have read my blog today 49 were using Bloglines, 29 were using FeedDemon, 22 on Firefox Live Bookmarks, 18 RSS Bandit, 17 SharpReader, 15 NetNewsWire, 15 Newsgator and then all the rest.

That's pretty typical. Bloglines is always at the top since it tells me how many people are subscribed as opposed to how many people actually read it that day. The rest jump around a little but FeedDemon is almost always 2nd or 3rd.

We know this (the smarter people at least).

Use use FeedDemon locally and Bloglines when away (not willing to have my mobile ripped off just yet) and they are a perfect partner!

I´m not sure what statistics regarding Bloglines mean since this services works as a proxy for several dozens, hundreds or thousands users reading the same feed.

Additional, guessing on market share by determining the number of hits the author sees from each RSS reader in his or her server logs can´t be the solution either, because each authors weblog/RSS feed is read by his/her customers - certainly in a significant higher percentage than by users of other software.

It's easy to find out how many Bloglines subscribers there are from server logs as they put the number in their user-agent string as they read your feed.

I agree with your point about updating all feeds taking up excessive bandwith, however it does present one problem. There are a few feed groups I have that I check on somewhat rarely, but that when I do read them I like to go through and see all the posts. Some sites limit their feed to the last 10 items, or the last day, so by the time I get to check them, I have gaps that cannot be recovered.

To get around this problem, once I a week I generally iterate through all of my groups to update them minimally.

What I would really like is actually to have an option where feed demon will update all of the groups, but only with a large interval. So for example every 5 days or every week or something. That, for me would address both the bandwith and update problems.

I agree with your point about updating all feeds taking up excessive bandwith, however it does present one problem. There are a few feed groups I have that I check on somewhat rarely, but that when I do read them I like to go through and see all the posts. Some sites limit their feed to the last 10 items, or the last day, so by the time I get to check them, I have gaps that cannot be recovered.

To get around this problem, once I a week I generally iterate through all of my groups to update them minimally.

What I would really like is actually to have an option where feed demon will update all of the groups, but only with a large interval. So for example every 5 days or every week or something. That, for me would address both the bandwith and update problems.

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