Daniel Rothamel

I’m a REALTOR, basketball referee, happy husband, and Community Manager (in no particular order). I have a passion for the real estate industry and officiating, a passion that I try to turn into inspiration on my blog, The Real Estate Zebra. I am also the Community Manager at Inman News. When I’m not blogging here on AG or the Zebra, you can usually find me on Twitter.

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22 responses to “What If My RSS Reader is Evil?”

  1. Athol Kay

    I broke my RSS feeds up into important ones and not so important ones. I use the delete key like an uncaring emperor more often now.

  2. Andy Kaufman

    Good luck on that one Daniel ;)

    I abandoned my bloglines account because it got too big & unwieldy and now I’m back up to 383 in Google Reader. The best move that i ever made was to start A & B folders for the ones that I feel that I need to read regularly.

    Who cares, Twitter has turned feed reading reading into a once in a while activity anyway.

  3. Jim Duncan

    So, should we all just email you what we write?

  4. Athol Kay

    LOL Jim

  5. Jay Thompson

    I used to feel compelled to read everything. I’m at 389 feeds now, which is ridiculous, so I can’t read everything (though I still read most). Those with partial feeds (or worse, headlines only) rarely get read.

    But I don’t want to miss anything! I’ve learned so much reading other blogs I’m afraid I might.

    But I hear where you are coming from about the stifling of creativity Daniel. The other thing I find is that I often ponder a blog post before I write it. Then I’ll be perusing the reader and see someone else had a similar thought. Happened just this morning. I saw an article on people torching their houses to avoid foreclosure. Then I saw Ducan, damn him, had already posted on it. Now I’m thinking – “I can’t post now, I’ll just be copying Jim”

    But should that matter? Does every single post have to consist of pure original thought? *I* read Jim Duncan, but some of my readers don’t. So I should write that post, no?

    But God forbid the RE.net think I’m out there stealing ideas from another RE.netter.

    On the other hand, F ‘em. I write for my readers, not the RE.net. At least most of the time…

    Huh. Not reading feeds. Very interesting thought. don’t know if I could stay away for a month. I get feed cravings when I’m off it for a day.

    But it’s sure worth pondering… keep us posted how it goes!

  6. Kelley Koehler

    Luck to you, Zebra, as requested. I went through that thought process a couple weeks ago, and I pared down my feeds by about half, and then categorized them all. Now, I can read through just the things I want to, and somehow feel less guilty. If big mortgage news comes out, I know to go read the lender category. I’ve got a couple in my “entertaining” category that I read daily. The “Locally Focused RE” stuff I get to maybe once a week, just to see what some others are doing. My “Industry Blogs” gets read maybe every other day or so – the bloodhounds and similar. I’ve got the local Genius’ in their own category (don’t ya’ll feel special?), and I’ve got an “Inspiring” category that usually gets read right after the entertaining group.

    There are other groups that I’m still paring down. Too many SEO things, and my lender group is getting too big as well. The RE Service provider group is probably getting cut in half soon. My non-RE marketing group is interesting, but I need to tune out a couple of voices there to really concentrate on the couple that I like.

    I find myself reading more things that catch my attention because i’m doing it at a time when I’m ready to pay attention to that category. And I never visit the reader before writing my own posts. I don’t want to contaminate my head with other voices or ideas.

  7. Tom Royce

    Daniel

    I do not look at my RSS feeds until I am done writing my morning posts just for that reason. If I read what other people say I tend to just regurgitate it, consciously or subconsioulsy.

    So I tend to read the RSS feeds in the late afternoon or evening.

    Tom

  8. Athol Kay

    And by definition, 50% of what the RE.net writes is a below average post. If an entire blog starts falling below that line… just cut it.

  9. Kelley Koehler

    You’re never one to mince words, Athol. :)

    I moved all my feeds to Google reader from IE in order to organize them. And once I got them all in there, I left it alone for a couple days. Some blogs, I could read 13 new posts and not like any of them – snip! Or if I read through the last week of stuff and still had no idea who the author was or what the blog was about – snip!

    The great thing about categorizing them according to what they’re about is that I could see how many I had of each type. I want to keep an eye on lending issues, but I don’t need to read 15 lender blogs, so I’m paring that down to just my favorite handful. Same for the locally focused RE guys, the SEO stuff, the marketing stuff – it was so much easier to pare down once I realized how many potentially duplicate feeds I was trying to digest.

  10. Robert D. Ashby

    I have over 150 feeds and it is all about the headline. Usually I take a few minutes every hour or two to delete the crap that is not appealling and tag those I would like to read later (time permitting). I try to clear out the tagged entries, by “most appealling” down the list each day or evening. It is all about the headline or your posts will not be read, period.

    While I don’t want to miss anything I really want to read, I follow the cardinal rule, if you haven’t read it in a week, it probably wasn’t important to you anyway, so a flushing comes over the weekends, sorry.

  11. Benn Rosales

    I use no RSS feeds what-so-ever. I follow a thread of blogs (and twitter) that link to here and there like a conversation. If you write a post that relates to another in the re blog world, but fail to track back to where your thought originated, I stop reading. I know exactly who is guilty of leeching off of others thoughts, ideas and even emotions on certain topics and have no real depth of their own.

    I really admire you Daniel for not falling victim to writing off the backs of others and seeking out your own thoughts, feelings and ideas. I really am sick of the idea that those who have no voice live their blog life to tear down those ideas and thoughts of another because they have nothing positive of their own to offer.

    We’re not talking about opinion of current events, I’m talking about what is written when there is no news cycle to opine about.

    C’est la vie.

  12. Athol Kay

    Oh I hold back a lot Kelley. It may not seem like I do, but I do. :-)

    About a quarter of my posts start as blog comments and just morph into posts as I blah on and on, so I do like tracking what is happening. I think part of blogging is a conversation, so commenting and continuing post ideas and themes is important. The one thing that worries me about a feed reader blackout is not commenting for a month.

    Partial feeds irk me. I hate having to click through to read something. A blog has to be fantastic to survive in my feed reader as a partial feed.

  13. Dan Green

    @ Daniel, if you’re turning off the feed reader, are you even reading these comments?

  14. Ines

    you’re nuts! but I get your point. I’m with Jay about the learning thing. I am a better Realtor because of blogs and I’m addicted to the knowledge and I am very often inspired by others. I couldn’t do it…..let’s see how you do and how creative you get.

  15. Maureen Francis

    I think it is a great idea. Sometimes the ‘noise’ distracts our own thoughts. 30 days won’t kill you. You will not kill you.

  16. Jim Cronin

    I’m not ashamed to admit that I had actually been on a full RSS blackout for almost all of 2007. I just couldn’t keep up with the reading of everything I had subscribed to using Bloglines. When I did log in, I couldn’t take that I had 1000′s of unread posts. So, I just stop going to my Bloglines completely.

    I knew I was missing the greater conversation on the RE.net, and part of me felt bad about that, but I knew what a slippery slope it would become to get back into it. I relied on others telling me that there was an interesting post over at Sellsius or BHB or ActiveRain or wherever, and that’s about the only connection I had to the community’s writing. Curiously I would also poke around to see what others were up to, if I found myself with a free moment, but I continued to resist the need to subscribe and keep up.

    Now things have changed again. I actually have way more time for RE.net participation because of the efficiency with which our company is running. Starting from scratch, I have begun to reconnect to the greater conversation. iGoogle is the bomb. It allows me to set up tabs for different groups like SEO, or RE.net or Tomato bloggers or AR friends etc and have pages of their feeds super organized. I’m not at the 100′s of feeds that I used to be, but I no can comfortably manage the 40-50 that I feel bring the best noise.

    Yes, you guys are on it too.

    Great post Zebra.

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