On Sunday, February 23, 2003, at 06:36 PM, J C Lawrence wrote:
> I've begun to wonder if that single point will either dictate the
> re-emergence of pseudo-Usenet (via moderated non-big 5 groups and
> server-side SPAM controls), or the RSS/RDF/XML-RPC world will win out.
>
blogs, RSS and aggregators are already showing us the way towards the
next phase in all of this, understanding the difference between push
and pull information. I'm starting to work towards RSS feeds of my mail
lists, and then I need to find some way to allow RSS-subscribed people
to post to a list easily (probably through some of the stuff we've
talked about with TDMA and mailman).
mailing lists won't go away, but we're getting some technologies in
place that'll allow users alternatives to that information that isn't
generating interrupts unless the users feel it's worth the
interruptions. having the same information available via push (e-mail)
and pull (RSS) solves that problem, and allows users access to the info
without handing over their mailboxes to the message volume of lists
they aren't as interested in.
--
Chuq Von Rospach, Architech
chuqui@plaidworks.com -- http://www.plaidworks.com/chuqui/blog/
The first rule of holes: If you are in one, stop digging.
Follow-Ups:
References:
|
|