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While the Iron is Hot
Within a few weeks, there will be a search function. Lijit is helping us out.
Thanks!
Guy
Personally i'm very keen on it. It's the gateway for newcomers to enter the blogosphere and find the top blogs quickly. Then they can work their way down and find their own niche. Or just read.
When Alltop debuted I challenged my Twitter followers (might be time to do this again) to show an offline friend one of the categories that friend is most into. Probably overdue to do that again.
Not because I adore Guy and want Alltop to succeed (both are true) or because I'm on the Twitter Alltop (thanks!) but because I want more of the mainstream to benefit wildly from the kinds of breakthroughs social media makes possible.
Great post Chris!
:-)
Guy
1) As type of online magazine rack that students can use in research.
2) The power of RSS feeds and Creative Commons licensing.
It's been a great study in collaboration as well, as the community itself has had great input in who gets included into the Alltop sections
As said above, Alltop is a great way to get lesser known voices into the mainstream. We show it off often.
I run a company and have no time. I like to be knowledgeable about things beyond The Economist or the New Yorker or one specific art magazine like Juxtapose or highsnobiety or om. I have stacks of magazines, online accounts for premium news, trade publications for metal finishing and licensing, sunday NYT, 3 weeks worth of old economists and dont read more than a book a month for fun these days (excluding XYZ for Dummies issues).
Alltop can be something that connects people to more breadth of opinions more easilly rather than forcing all your feeds to be so hyper specialized. It's an age of leftists getting their news from leftists and right wingers from rush and "tony katz" and this is part of what polarizes our culture, at least online. if we can help people get out of their custom tailored RSS web2.0 newsfeeds it's a good thing for the world.
ben
I also love how open and receptive Guy is about new ideas and suggestions for new categories. For example, he created the virtual.alltop.com category rather quickly after I suggested such a topic. He launched his wiki and off we all went to submit the best feeds. The same for tv.alltop.com right now. It's impressive and exciting to know we can all be a part of this. Guy understands the power of community and making us all feel a part of the same family.
Pai
p.s. Being in the twitterati (twitter.alltop.com) really has nothing to do with how I feel about alltop because I loved it before I received the honor. But it sure doesn't hurt how I feel about it or Guy. :)
Plus, when I want to find out more information about a different topic, like social networking, I go to Alltop to discover new blogs, or older ones I haven't visited in a while.................:)
The short of it - people generally "got it," but they were all looking for news content which related to them. The challenge we saw was the audience recognizing the sources' credibility (e.g., NYT, inc.com, etc.), but that the content provided didn't match up with their needs. The flip side was also true - the headlines of the "unknown" content providers aligned with their content wants, but the credibility issue wasn't eliminated.
I'm a fan of the concept of AllTop and think it's an effective means of getting information out.
However, there are questions that need to be asked:
* What happens when a very popular site that seems impartial in its nature has an informal and highly subjective publishing process?
* What policing is there that the best content will be on the site (whatever that is)?
* And, of course, what's it like to be one of the sites that feels they should be there but isn't selected? Something about AllTop feels even more biased than not getting on other sites that are more community driven. It can really hurt.
When I talk about social media/Web 2.0 with folks like that, they know very little about any of it besides blogs, and they often ask how to "find the good stuff" quickly. They do not want a tutorial on Bloglines vs Google Reader.
I used to send them to Technorati, but now I send them to Google Blog Search and Alltop. With two travel blogs on Alltop, I'm biased towards the site, but I do like its ease of use and catholic approach to selecting blogs across topic areas.
I think as it grows and evolves, it will move past some of the concerns people have about it, or they'll go on using what works for them.
The market is obviously out there and there is so much potential to reach a larger audience. Now if they made local alltops like seattle.alltop.com, now that would be interesting.
I've been mining the categories for my own purposes too. In particular, I think it is an excellent place to do headline research. I don't want to subscribe to hundreds of blogs, but I like to skim hundreds of headlines looking for ones that jump out at me. I've discovered a few new blogs this way, and I've used this approach to sharing excellent content on social media.
I'm excited to hear that Alltop is working with Lijit for a search function. I use Lijit on one of my sites, and I love it!
I give Alltop an A+!
Aside for the aggregate value, it's VERY well designed, intuitive and at times addictive. Overall, great site.
It's a great site. My only complaint? It has kind of a stupid name.
Thanks for the suggestion Chris. I did and he did.
As for using Alltop myself for main feeds, I doubt it. I'll check in every once in awhile because it's useful to see what they believe are the top for each category, but other than that, I need a personalised list (and I'm still searching for the 'perfect' reader).
My mother (70) and mother-in-law (89) on the other hand, will most likely love it.
I set both up with Macs years ago, but due to their ages (the Internet is still 'magic'), they've been passed up by the speed of technology.
Alltop should be an easy way to keep them up on subjects of interest.