Archive: Digg

Am I the only person who thinks that Technorati’s “WTF” feature is absolutely terrible?

For a start, it has got the worst name ever. I’m sure it seemed like a funny joke at the time. But now it looks silly with “WTF” plastered all over Technorati. For the uninitiated, “WTF” means “What the fuck?” to the cool kids. Technorati devised an oh-so-funny backronym for its new feature: “Where’s the flame?” Uhh.

But not only has it got that awful name, but the feature itself is utterly diabolical. It is supposed to help explain why certain search terms are popular at the moment. But if you wanted to find that out, wouldn’t you just, err, search it and look it up?

Seemingly, any old person can get their terrible writing just one click away from the Technorati front page. Mostly — and this could have been predicted — it is people with bees in their bonnets.

One WTF for Facebook, which is currently in the news for its awesome Facebook Applications, is this:

Recently, Facebook made some changes – to make their site more ‘user friendly’… they even have a link “Spread the Word… Invite your friends to Facebook”…

But if Facebook still has ties to the CIA, DARPA, and Department of Defense… do you think I really wanna invite my friends?!… I’ll let them have at least SOME privacy…

Why are Google and Facebook always hiding their intentions? Why is it that when advocacy groups address their concerns on Privacy Rights… Google and Facebook ignore them? Why aren’t Google and Facebook TRANSPARENT companies like every other ETHICAL business on this PLANET?!

If Google and Facebook are really for Peace and for helping their users… why don’t they correct their ways and SHOW us that they care about our Privacy Rights?

I don’t even know what this means. It doesn’t explain anything about Facebook. It is just a badly written puff piece about privacy — but without making clear exactly what the privacy implications are meant to be. What, for instance, is the supposed link to the CIA about? Any evidence? Any explanation of what the supposed implications are meant to be? Frankly it looks like it was written by a loon.

You could say the same thing about blogs, but the point is that blogs succeed and fail under their own steam. Bad blogs simply do not get read. A bad “WTF” entry is, as I said, one click away from Technorati’s front page.

And while there is an attempt at some kind of Digg-style “wisdom of crowds” democratic moderation, nobody uses it. The WTF I quoted above is currently the second-highest WTF for Facebook, with a grand total of 2 votes. Third, also with a total of 2 votes, is a piece of spam. I think this might have something to do with the fact that WTF is useless, and voting would be a complete waste of time.

Even if you could add comments, so that you could have a discussion around the issues raised in the original ‘blurb’ posting, that would add a great deal to the feature. But then again, this sort of thing is what blogs are meant to be for. And Technorati is meant to be a blog search engine. So this feature ought to be totally redundant. My guess is that it is, and Technorati just don’t realise it.

Why can’t Technorati just concentrate on its constantly broken blog search engine, which is after all what Technorati is meant to be about? These silly features are just a distraction to both visitors and no doubt Technorati’s developers.

Even though I just criticised Digg less than a week ago, I decided to subcribe the the RSS feed recently. And now I’ve just registered on it. Maybe you can blame this on summer boredom, but I only registered so that I could bury rather than actually ‘Digg’ something. I’ve only found one or two interesting things on it. Despite Digg’s good reputation, there are a lot of turds managing to float to the top.

Ben Metcalfe has a Bash of Boing Boing (and other ‘A-list’ blogs) that spreads itself across two posts.

I find it an extremely odd propositions in that we (the audience) are being asked to value the aggregation decisions of fairly arbitrary and otherwise insignificant (in the wider context) group of people.

I literally think in the back of my mind “why do I care what three people called Xeni Jardine, Cory Doctrow and Mark Frauenfelder think is witty, amusing, clever or important”?

Regular readers of my blog probably know that the phrase “via Boing Boing” is very commonly used around here, so it won’t come as much of a surprise that I’m going to stick up for it.

For me, Ben Metcalfe is asking entirely the wrong question to himself. He shouldn’t be asking, “why do I care what three people called Xeni Jardine, Cory Doctrow and Mark Frauenfelder think is witty, amusing, clever or important?” The actual question he should be asking is: “Do I find this interesting?” If Ben Metcalfe answers “no” to that question, then that’s fair enough.

But I answer “yes” to that question. Now, I’m not just saying that because I feel obliged to because they’re in the A-list. Infact, having just looked at the Technorati top 100, I find that I only regularly read three of those blogs, and I occasionally look at a few others. But I haven’t even heard of most of them.

Boing Boing isn’t all good. I certainly don’t go through each post with a fine tooth-comb. But I find about 20% of the links they post very interesting. For me, that’s a much higher success rate than, say, Digg (top link on Digg at the moment: “Best line ever on South Park”… hardly earth-shattering) or del.icio.us (as much as I like del.icio.us).

Sometimes Boing Boing is infuriatingly boring. Sometimes they post something that I saw about three years ago. I guess you can’t be too angry about that though — that’s just a side-effect of the vastness of the internet. But it’s that very vastness of the internet that makes a website like Boing Boing so useful.

Ben Metcalfe continues:

I’d actually much rather value a list of what my friends think is cool and a list of the overall most interesting on the entire Internet via ‘wisdom of crowd’/etc.

I’ve dealt with ‘wisdom of crowds’ (Digg, del.icio.us) already. As for friends, it is true that I find a lot of good links from my friends. But that can only be a part of your internet consumption. I trust my friends to give me a good conversation in the pub, or to save my life when I’m drowning, and all sorts of cheesy bollocks like that. But can I rely on them exclusively to tell me what’s cool on the internet? Certainly not. That’s why a website like Boing Boing remains popular.

In his other post, Ben Metcalfe takes issue with the fact that Boing Boing (and other podcasts and blogs like it) merely aggregate content, rather than creating it.

the general observation and frustration that I would like to throw into the mix is that so many of the considered A-List of bloging, podcasting and vloging are those who simply ‘aggregate’ other people’s content.

For example:

BoingBoing (blog) – the most popular English-language blog out there is merely a repository of links. They even ask contributors to write suggested content to accompany the link. In reality, I feel Cory, Xeni, Mark and Co add very little value to proposition other than to sort through their inbox and post up what tickles their fancy or has been built by their mates.

That is indeed true. But is there anything wrong with that? You may as well say something like, “Why should I trust the news to tell me what’s relevant and interesting in the world? They’re not making the news; they’re just telling us what it is.” The thing is, you do get people who say that. But I think most people would agree that the news is a pretty useful place to find out what’s going on in the world. Not perfect, but pretty good nonetheless.

By the same token, Boing Boing is a useful place to find out what’s interesting on the internet. Not perfect, but pretty good nonetheless. And I don’t think Boing Boing pretends to be anything else.

As for the ‘self-perpetuating’ nature of the A-list, I’m not so sure about that either. It might be true to some extent, but here’s what David Sifry wrote in the State of the Blogosphere earlier this year:

With so may blogs and bloggers out there, one might think that it is a lost cause for new bloggers to achieve any significant audience, that the power curve means that there’s no more room left at the top of the “A-List”.

Fortunately, the data shows that this isn’t the case.

Thanks to the Wayback machine, here’s a look at the Technorati Top 100 as it appeared on November 26, 2002 (bear with me if the wayback machine is slow). Then look at it as it appeared on December 5, 2003. And again on November 30, 2004. And again on April 1, 2005. And now look at it today.

Let’s take a few examples. Have a look at PostSecret. It is the #3 site on the Technorati Top 100 today, with over 12,000 sites that have linked to it in the last 180 days. It didn’t even exist on the chart in April of 2005. Or look at The Huffington Post. It is #5 on the Top 100. It too, didn’t exist on the chart in April of 2005. Or look at the #47 blog in April, 2005 Baghdad Burning. This blog still is regularly posting, but has fallen to #304.

All of this isn’t to say that everything about the ‘A-list’ is great. As I said, I only read three of the ‘top 100′ blogs. A lot of them simply don’t interest me. And I have no doubt that in the blogosphere a hegemony of the sort that bloggers often criticise the ‘mainstream media’ for is emerging. But a lot of popular blogs out there are quite valuable — and I think Boing Boing is one of them.

I recently read a few interesting articles about the way blogs are structured, all via Weblog Tools Collection. The articles made me think a bit about the conventional layout of a blog. Is it always best to have posts displayed in reverse chronological order?

The suggestion made by some is that it is a bit pointless just to have a list of all the recent posts when you might have hundreds of good posts that are buried in the archives forever.

For instance, Chris Pearson says that most visitors come from feed readers like Newsgator and Bloglines — sites that already show your most recent posts. So when they land on your blog they basically see exactly the same thing again. What is the point in that?

I think there are a few holes in this theory though. Firstly, I’m not sure that most of this blog’s readers are coming from feed readers. Also, even when they are coming from feed readers, there is no guarantee that they were reading your blog’s feed. It could well have been a link on another blog’s feed.

Even if they were reading your blog’s feed, the most likely reason why they would have decided to visit your blog would be because they want to comment on one of your recent posts.

That’s leaving aside the fact that people will just expect to see your most recent posts when they visit your blog simply because that’s how almost all blogs work. One of the major factors that distinguishes blogs from other types of website is the fact that the most recent posts usually appear first. That is simply how blogs work. If the content was presented in any other way it would probably cease to be a blog. But let us leave petty definitional squabbles to the side, because that’s not the point.

So, what are the other ways of presenting your blog? Technosailor offers visitors three different blog “views”. One — ‘The Current’ — is the standard style that we’re all used to, with the latest posts appearing at the top. But the other two are much more interesting.

One of the new views — ‘The Conversation’ — raises a post to the top of the front page when somebody comments on it. This is a bit like a message board, albeit one where only one person has the ability to start a thread. I have to admit that I really like this idea. Too often I feel like new comments on old posts go unnoticed. I even tend not to reply to comments on old posts because I think that nobody will read them. ‘The Conversation’ view would change this.

The only problem is that sometimes the more comments a post gets, the lower the quality of comments becomes. Take, for instance, two of the three most-commented on posts on this blog: Who needs shopping channels? and The death of Robin Cook.

Technosailor’s third view is ‘The Best’ which, rather predicatbly, is a list of posts which the author considers to be his best. I used to have a list of what I considered to be my best posts. The problem was that it took a lot of effort to maintain. Often I would have to read posts from several months ago that I couldn’t even remember writing. Then, whenever I took a look at my so-called ‘best of’ list I thought that all of the posts were rubbish and didn’t necessarily warrant the extra attention.

An alternative method of creating a ‘best of’ would be to have a Reddit / Digg style system where readers would vote for the best posts. But how many people would go out of their way to rate blog posts like that? It is one thing to do it on a social site like Digg, but it’s quite another to rate blog posts in this manner.

You could also opt for some kind of automated system. I use a plugin, Popularity Contest, that assigns popularity values to posts based on things like number of page views, comments and so on. But a computer can never judge the quality of a post like a human can. This method can also fall victim to Google. This post is the third ‘most popular’ on this blog — not because my post about Russell Brand was brilliant, but because a commenter happened to mention a certain mucky video.

I know most of this sort of advice is aimed at ‘pro bloggers’ and so on. But as you might have guessed with all this beard-stroking, I am considering implementing some of these ideas. I think the main question is, “Who do I want to reward the most? Regular readers who will be looking for my most recent posts? Or new visitors who will want to see the best posts?”

The solution I am currently edging towards is to keep the reverse chronological structure — mostly because that is what almost everybody will expect, and doing anything else is just being obscure for the sake of it in my opinion. There is already a list of recent comments (at the top of the front page), and I do have a ‘best of‘ page. But I could still ramp up the sidebar content, hopefully bringing more attention to new comments and old favourites.

Not too long ago I ditched the idea of the sidebar altogether because I thought it created too much clutter in the form of blogrolls and the like. But I’ve already put a linklog back in there. And perhaps carefully selecting what goes in the sidebar could encourage visitors to get the most out of a blog.

So, do any of you have any thoughts? What are you looking for when you visit this blog? Should I put more content in the sidebar. If so, what should it be?

Update: While we’re at it, does anybody have any other thoughts on the design? Is less more? My brother is currently interrogating me about the fact that all the content is on the left (presumably as opposed to the centre). I’m thinking of designing it for monitors that are at least 1024 pixels wide, because few visitors have monitors smaller than that now. What do you think?