Well, people, now I know for sure: this English course has been created with the exact purpose of astonishing me week by week! First the surfing of the blogosphere, then the development of a personal blog and now…the discovery of feed aggregators! When Sarah pronounced these words for the first time last Wednesday, I could hardly figure out what she was talking about: the closest thing to a feed aggregator I could think of was the little shelf you can see on the right (I apologize if I didn’t use the right term to define it, but I don’t even know how to call it in Italian!!!). (photo by padday)
Once again, I realized the world has moved forward without telling me: now there is an ingenious technology that enables you to have to hand all the news you are interested in and it is called (guess what?) feed aggregator! I have to admit that at first I was really sceptical about the usefulness of this tool: I mean, to check the aggregator you have to connect to the Internet, so why don’t you simply visit the websites to look for new information? What’s the point of resorting to this complicated (I thought it was!) technology?
Maybe I thought we were still in the Middle Ages, when scholars wasted hours and hours looking up something they hadn’t read before in huge dusty volumes, which probably had not been touched for decades…Well, until last Wednesday my situation was not so dissimilar: I –the scholar of the new millennium :-) – checked my favourite websites each time I needed to learn something new, without even knowing if they had been updated since my last visit; therefore my expectations were often disappointed and after reading all the pages through and clicking all the links I realized that nothing new had been added recently. “Great”, I thought, “I wasted half an hour and I didn’t find anything, I will have to check again tomorrow…how boring!”
Once again, I realized the world has moved forward without telling me: now there is an ingenious technology that enables you to have to hand all the news you are interested in and it is called (guess what?) feed aggregator! I have to admit that at first I was really sceptical about the usefulness of this tool: I mean, to check the aggregator you have to connect to the Internet, so why don’t you simply visit the websites to look for new information? What’s the point of resorting to this complicated (I thought it was!) technology?
Maybe I thought we were still in the Middle Ages, when scholars wasted hours and hours looking up something they hadn’t read before in huge dusty volumes, which probably had not been touched for decades…Well, until last Wednesday my situation was not so dissimilar: I –the scholar of the new millennium :-) – checked my favourite websites each time I needed to learn something new, without even knowing if they had been updated since my last visit; therefore my expectations were often disappointed and after reading all the pages through and clicking all the links I realized that nothing new had been added recently. “Great”, I thought, “I wasted half an hour and I didn’t find anything, I will have to check again tomorrow…how boring!”
photo by somefool
I was sure that I would be condemned to this agony for the rest of my life, but now I have to change my mind: no more afternoons spent surfing pointlessly the Net, the feed aggregator is working for you! You simply have to subscribe to the websites you love the most and the update will be sent you automatically; you don’t even need to look for it scrolling up and down the page because the aggregator selects the new pieces of information and display them on your screen, thus bringing your effort to naught! That’s what I call “smart technology”! What’s more, you can also create your personal playlist and catalogue your subscriptions by category. For example, thanks to my friend Martina’s irreplaceable help, I divided the websites I chose into groups:
- Group B: containing my groupmates’ blogs;
- My friends' blogs: containing other friends’ blogs;
- My interests: containing everything I'm more keen on (recipes, travels...) and some websites where I can find useful information (such as BBC and CNN news, National Geographic).
As you can see, I abandoned my scepticism and I’ve become an “aggregator lover"!
3 commenti:
Hi, Elena!
I enjoyed reading your post about feed aggregators. It seems we all had the same impression at first. Like most of us, I never heard about this technology before our last lesson...But I never heard about any technology regarding the Net, so... It's not a surprise!:-) I definitely still live in the Middle Ages. But I feel confident: I'm slowly opening my mind to new horizons; by the end of this year course, I'll surely be a specialist in new technologies!
You said that you couldn't see how a feed aggregator could be useful. But in fact it's very useful: it's true, you have to connect to the Internet, but if you create a bookmark with your favourite sites in your pc, you can't see when they are updated. So, in this way, it's VERY useful, isn't it?
Fianlly, just a question: how on earth can you write soooo long posts? Just joking,of course!;-)
See you soon!
Marty
Hi Elena! I think that our first impressions were very similar. I asked myself what was the point of using a feeds aggregator when I could simply search for my favourite websites by myself. Then I started using bloglines and the answer was clear. I can organise the most interesting sites and blogs in playlists and easily check if there is any new information. In this way I don't need to visit every single website to see if it is updated or not. I think that by the end of the year we will have learnt lots of useful things about the internet and its tools!
Hi Elena!
your enthusiasm for feed aggregators is "contagious"! After reading your post one can't stay indifferent and feels the need of knowing something more about this marvelous and "revolutionary" tool which can change our lives so deeply. Like you, I was skeptical at the beginning, thinking right the same thing:"why can't I go on bookmarking my favorites websites?" But now I realize that in this way everything has become less time-wasting and I'm beginning to appreciate this technology.
See you in the lab!
Sara
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