DISQUS

Mashable - The Social Media Guide: 2008/06/17/favorit-rss-launches/

  • Daniel Saxil-Nielsen · 1 year ago
    Yahoo supports OpenID, so you can log in using your Yahoo account :).
  • Adam Ostrow · 1 year ago
    true, but on fav.or.it, when you click OpenID, it asks you to put in your OpenID URL. Not nearly as straightforward as the Yahoo implementation on some other sites like Plaxo.
  • Daniel Saxil-Nielsen · 1 year ago
    True, Plaxo is simple but it just a link, we have a cool popup box which lets you easily enter your OpenID to lots of services (as well as Yahoo).
  • Adam Hirsch · 1 year ago
    I'm loving the Comments integration and clean look. Google can learn a few things from fav.or.it...
  • stewart townsend · 1 year ago
    Great to see fav.or.it live, one of the very first Startup Essentials Customers in the UK, who learned how a $14bn giant can help them, check out the FT this week, PR for Nic and also more to come over the next month.....great to see Coolthreads massively scaling, but low cost....
  • Brian Kissel · 1 year ago
    Following up on Adam Ostrow's comments, you can improve the OpenID login experience with ID Selector (www.idselector.com). With this universal login widget, the user only has to select their OpenID provider from a picklist, enter their account name (not the full OpenID URL), and login.

    The ID Selector remembers user preferences, thereby providing "single click login" on return visits. The user doesn't have to type in anything.

    Additionally, the ID Selector remembers your preferences across sites so that you get single click login across all websites using it. There's a list of some sites using ID Selector at https://www.idselector.com/site/enabled
  • Aaron Powell · 1 year ago
    Importing of a feed list downloaded from Google Reader seems to be broken for me -- it keeps telling me the data is invalid. And I think not being able to add my own feeds is a deal breaker. The interface is nice and the integrated commenting is a great idea, but I want to be able to read what I want to read.
  • Adam Ostrow · 1 year ago
    yea, personally I would re-think this move if I were them
  • Facey Spacey Development · 1 year ago
    I think the reason they do it is so commenting from within fav.or.it works for all blogs. I really think not working out a hybrid scenario is going to prevent them from reaching that "tipping point" they need to reach to become extremely popular.

    I honestly think that a small company will never, or at least have an extremely hard time, making the cross-site comment thing work, let alone be one of their core offerings. I think the attention data thing will probably take its place as the crux or clincher in their offering. What other sites are really paving the way in attention data usage for recommendations???

    James
    from
    FaceySpacey.com - "The Startup Incubator"
  • Daniel Saxil-Nielsen · 1 year ago
    @Aaron Powell sorry you can't import your own feeds at the moment. We currently cover 2000 of the most popular feeds, which are all nicely categorised. We plan to expand that really soon as we scale up our service. We have got some nifty ideas to overcome the problem of not being able to import your feeds but decided that this was a move we had to take, primarily because we didn't want users to be faced with random 'rubbish'.

    Has anyone mentioned the widget yet?
  • Richie · 1 year ago
    I was interested up to the point you said they don't allow you to add your own feeds.

    I realise that they are aiming at normal people, but normal people want to subscribe to their flickr comments, facebook notifications and their employer's RSS streams, which are never going to be in a directory.
  • Adam Ostrow · 1 year ago
    agreed ... hopefully they listen :-)
  • Steven Finch · 1 year ago
    What I really dont like about sites like this is the fact that they use the content of each blog, then turn it into their own page, so the actual blog and story doesnt get any traffic from the site. So there better be some benefit in terms of link juice or it is just another complete waste of time!
  • Gary · 1 year ago
    Basically what fav.or.it is doing by providing 2000 selected feeds is advancing the readership of a very small selection of websites. What about all the other websites out there? There is a heck of a lot of great content out there that is not on the select 2000 websites but these are being disadvantaged by sites such as fav.or.it which only provide a fraction of a percent of the knowledge and content available on the 'web. At least Technorati (yes, I know it's slightly different!)and others give the opportunity for the majority of websites to promote their content.