Brad Fitzpatrick (LiveJournal founder) is at Google working on PubSubHubbub, which is a distributed push system for RSS. The Google Reader team is already experimenting with it (as a provider currently, not a consumer): http://googlereader.blogspot.com/2009/08/pubsubhubbub-suppor...
I can't help but feel that this idea misses the point of why Twitter was so successful - far more than the notion of convincing all those millions of users to start their own blogs and use Google Reader. The sheer simplicity of it all lowers the barriers to entry, something that asking people to start a wordpress blog or whatever else would never capture.
That really isn't what I was trying to convey. The idea was that Twitter needs to be decentralized and we need services to do that. Like any open alternative to something popular and closed, it will take time to get going, but this can be just as user friendly as Twitter - there is just the option for people to host it themselves, essentially
Possibly the openmicroblogging protocol behind laconia or pubsubhubbub. Hopefully we can move away from platforms and instead have easy interoperability for a variety of apps.
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Use your reader of choice (Google Reader is the best)
There you have it, a microblogging network.
PS. use Atom feeds for a better experience.
That, my friends, is the twitter killer. With all the themes, plugins, widgets and all the ecosystem.
At the same time, Google should be updating their Reader with an Instant Update feature for selected feeds.
I know Wave will have some of this, but why wait?
Brad Fitzpatrick (LiveJournal founder) is at Google working on PubSubHubbub, which is a distributed push system for RSS. The Google Reader team is already experimenting with it (as a provider currently, not a consumer): http://googlereader.blogspot.com/2009/08/pubsubhubbub-suppor...