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October 19, 2007

Phil Windley
pjw
Phil Windley's Technometria
» Rivers, Trends, and Leaderboards

Dave Winer's been experimenting with keywords in his river of news idea. Doc thinks its the future of newspapers. I agree that a river is a better way to get the news than the old news cycle.

It's interesting to compare Dave's NY Times keywords with Google trends, the most searched on keywords for the last 24 hours. Almost nothing in common--not that you'd necessarily expect there would be. People looking for the kind of information you get from the Times make up only a small portion of Google users, I'd expect.

Dave's keywords are only updated once every 24 hours, but I expect that that is merely a practical consequence of the 24 hour news cycle of his source. With more sources, who are themselves continuously updating, the keyword river could be as dynamic as you'd want it to be.

Dave mentions that this looks like a leaderboard and indeed it is. Anything that uses popularity (even of keyword usage) to determine relevance is going to end up looking like a leaderboard. I expect that there would be multiple ways of sorting the river and keyword frequency would be just one. Doesn't bother me...

Update: Dave tells me "the keywords are updated every hour, and do a complete refresh every 24 hours on a rolling basis." Cool.

Tags: news syndication

September 12, 2007

Phil Windley
pjw
Phil Windley's Technometria
» Syndication Oriented Architectures

Two of the people I respect the most, Jon Udell and Rohit Khare are together in one podcast: Jon's latest from his weekly Interviews With Innovators podcast on IT Conversations. Jon has a short write-up on his blog about the podcast and it's topic: syndication oriented architectures.

SynOA was born on the open web and is now creeping into the enterprise. To understand why, just consider Facebook. It is a deeply syndication-oriented application. Although Facebook users never have to think about it in these terms, they are constantly publishing events onto a syndication bus while at the same time subscribing to aggregated feeds published by their friends. As a result, they're effortlessly yet comprehensively aware of a large number of summarized event streams. Rohit Khare thinks that syndication-oriented architecture will enable business users to achieve that same kind of awareness.

Good stuff. Rohit has a white paper on SynOA at KnowNow (registration required). It's worth reading to get the meat of what he's talking about.

Tags: itconversations soa web+services rss syndication