In Praise of Feedly

The holy grail of the information junkie is the perfect Google Reader client.  The idea is that you use Google Reader as your hub for subscriptions and category management, but you use an entirely different website to actually consume that content. (Some clients also take advantage of the Reader API to let you subscribe and organize in their interface).

Google Reader used to be pretty good on its own, but it’s a bit spartan — especially after its recent visual… er… refresh.  Most clients took the Google Reader organizational model and just prettified it.  With the advent of iPad apps like Flipboard, however, the trend has been to try to merge the utilitarian advantages of the Google Reader organizational model with the magazine-style prettiness and delight of Flipboard.

I have tried many different Google Reader clients over the years, but I’ve recently settled on one that really shines: Feedly.  In a clean-but-not-too-clean interface, Feedly strikes the right balance between a beautiful experience and serious information consumption tool.  ”My Feedly” is your front page that pulls the most interesting or popular articles to your attention right when you log in.  Once you’ve read or scanned those, you can click the check mark on the right side of the screen to mark that page as read, and then either refresh or move to a new section.  The sections correspond to your Google Reader subscription categories.

Feedly also provides a series of widgets across the site that are actually useful.  For example, on the home page are a list of “Featured Sources” from your subscriptions (which you can customize) if you want to jump to a specific feed.  An “Essentials” widget provides a list of curated sections that you can subscribe to, like Gardening, Android, and Cinema.  Feedly also hooks into your Twitter and Facebook feeds to scoop out most-liked or -tweeted articles.  In fact, there is a very basic interface to post Tweets directly from Feedly if you want.  Stock quotes are also pulled in.

Although the default view for any given section is the magazine layout (see first screenshot), there are five other views to choose from: timeline, titles only, mosaic, cards, and full articles.  Feedly retains Google Reader’s ability to mark as read only those articles older than a day or a week.  And there is a really excellent subscription management system that lets you easily subscribe, categorize, and drag-drop feeds between categories.

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CLCT Website Update

We just pushed out a new version of the CLCT website.  Kudos to Daniel Carrico for all the heavy lifting!

And say, who’s that gentleman holding the hammer?  He looks like a pro.

Flecktones on Fallon

Musical gods among men.

Anchors Aweigh

My younger brother, Wilson, set sail on Monday for his first deployment as an officer in the United States Navy.  Above is an image of his ship — the U.S.S. Makin Island (LH-8) — leaving San Diego. (Image captured from this impressive video of the ship leaving the port).  The Makin Island is the first hybrid-power ship in the American Navy, and it also has a system to produce over 200,000 gallons per day of fresh water from an onboard desalination system.  This is the ship’s maiden deployment, having been certified after a series of qualifying exercises over the past year.

Although his assigned “day job” is as a public affairs officer, he is one of the few officers on board qualified to serve as “Officer of the Deck” — that is, he has been certified by the captain and other executive officers to command the ship from the bridge when the executive officers are elsewhere.  He does this for six hours or so each day.  So, he is much more of a badass than me.

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Stop SOPA. Save the Web.

Today, the House Judiciary Committee held a hearing about the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA).  SOPA — along with its Senate counterpart, PROTECT-IP — is a disaster waiting to happen.  Calling it a blunt instrument would be a compliment.  Essentially, it gives private actors the extrajudicial power to cut off traffic and advertising money to sites that are 99.9% legitimate, but happen to have a few links or pages related to infringing materials.  I’m not talking about random websites, either:  Etsy.  Flickr.  Tumblr.  All of them could face crippling liability that undercuts the existing DMCA notice-and-takedown system that — while most definitely imperfect — has enabled the birth and flourishing some of the most innovative websites we have today.

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