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July 30, 2007

NetNewsWire and Syncing

(cross-posted from blog.mignault.net)

I hope Brent Simmons got a lot of money for selling NetNewsWire to NewsGator, because he's thrown the software's reputation to the wind.

I mostly read news on 2 machines, a Powerbook and a dual G5 at work. Sometimes I also use the iMac we have upstairs in the study. Sometimes I'm on a machine I don't own with a web browser. What I want is the ability to read a feed item on one machine and have the other machines know that I've read it and not show it to me again as new.

If I subscribe to a feed on one machine, I want the others to know that and show me that feed when I read feeds on another machine.

In short, what I need is reliable synchronization across machines.

I don't think these are particularly unique needs. But NetNewsWire can't handle this scenario.

In the days when I ran emacs over a terminal connection to panix.com and read Usenet in gnus, this was easy. Whenever I quit, my .newsrc got updated with my read/unread counts, and that was that. It worked.

NetNewsWire once worked pretty well in terms of synchronization. I could synchronize my Bloglines subscriptions with it, and life was good.

Then NNW got sold to NewsGator, and I was magnaminously offered a free 2 year subscription to NewsGator online. Not only that, but they ALSO had an online newsreader, so I could still read either on my Powerbook, my work machine, or a web browser, if I happened to be away from my own machines.

So I switched over to NewsGator syncing.

It has been an utter disaster ever since. NewsGator's web based reader is an horribly broken shitty piece of crap. I have just spent the last hour making multiple attempts at deleting a folder in my feeds list. I right-click the folder. I select "Delete folder." The folder disappears. I wait a few minutes to see if the change "took." I refresh the browser. The folder reappears.

I delete it again. I wait. I quit the browser. I restart the browser and go to the NewsGator reader. The folder is there again. I repeat the process. I quit that browser and open a different one. The folder is still there.

I decide to attack it from the NNW end. I open NNW and tell it to overwrite NewsGator. It merges the list with the online list. There's the folder still.

During my many replacement attempts, NNW/NewsGator appears to do things in an entirely arbitrary manner, randomly deleting feeds and setting read/unread counts on my feeds.

I do not appear to be alone. A search for "sync" on NewsGator's NNW support forum yields 178 topics. And from what I can see there, the support staff has no idea what's going on either. The typical entry has a user complaning about the same sorts of things I am - basically, that the syncing is just plain broken. In one hapless schmuck's case, after trying every last "fix" in the book, we get this total left-field Hail Mary play from the support guy:

This is just getting weird! Is there any chance that someone else could have your username/password and be using the account at another lcoation? We've seen this happen when people sell computers etc and leave the software on it.

Even if you don't think that is the case, can you try changing your password in NewsGator Online, and also NNW and see if that helps at all.

Of course, in the next reply, the poor user says that that didn't work either, and then all is silence. This is the worst kind of "support" - the kind where it's everything and anything's fault except the software's. Among the excuses trotted out in the support forum is to check with your IT administrator to see if SOAP headers aren't getting through your firewall, that people are closing the application before it has a chance to complete the sync, and that perennial favorite - you're not using a current enough beta.

Google Reader may not be a river of news, take full advantage of Mac OS X services, or be up to Gruber-caliber HIG snuff, but it has one distinct and overriding advantage:

It works as advertised.

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July 23, 2007

Good boy, Rex.

For the record: I will not “Amway” my Facebook friends « Scobleizer:

Like Rex Hammock, I too decided not to add the new PayPerPost Facebook Application. Why not? Because I don’t want to “Amway” or “Tupperware” my friends.
No, I just want to shill for Facebook instead. I mean, really, you gotta do better than this.

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Always blame the faux revolutionary

The Doc Searls Weblog : Sunday, July 22, 2007:
Seems like about once a week I get a call from a human reading from a script, doing "consumer research" and wanting to speak to "a person between the ages of 18 and 49 in your household". We don't have one of those, which is why I have to stifle the urge to ask the caller to tell me the name of the company doing the survey, so I can go out of my way never to spend any money with them. But I'm too busy for that. Or even this.
I know how you feel - I'm too busy to have to deal with your crappy broken RSS feed that republishes your whole day's output every time you add a new post. Here's some free VRM: fix the fucking thing.

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July 20, 2007

"I'm Scoble's friend!" cry millions

Incentive to join Facebook « Scobleizer:

Incentive to join Facebook

I just posted videos I did with Siemens’ Web strategist and Intel’s software community manager to Facebook. Available to my Facebook friends. I’ll add you as a friend so you can see these videos. Just sign up on Facebook and add me as a friend.
Hm. First, ick. Second, don't ever say a word about PayPerPost again. Ever. Third, I think we are using "friend" in its World's Oldest Profession sense, here, hey?

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July 15, 2007

Like she should talk

Why Vegetarians Are Eating Meat | Food & Wine:

Recently, when responding to the invitation to her high-school reunion, Katzen had to make a choice between the vegetarian and the conventional meal. She checked the nonvegetarian box. "The people who requested the vegetarian meal got fettuccine Alfredo," she says. "It's a bowl full of flour and butterfat. I'd much rather have vegetables and grains and a few bites of chicken."

I'll have more to say on the numerous straw men in this article soon (part of the whole "vegetarians converted by the unstoppable power of kindly-raised meat" thing,) but for a woman whose first 2 cookbooks were mainly 5000 changes rung on a "bowl full of flour and butterfat," a statement like this is disingenous veering wildly towards the hypocritical. The original Moosewood cookbooks are the unhealthiest kind of vegetarian cooking (in stark contrast to Laurel's Kitchen), and we have Mollie Katzen to thank in large part for that fettucine Alfredo.

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July 10, 2007

Bueller? Bueller?

Scoble & Rubel (Scripting News):

If anyone would port Frontier (it's GPL) to their mobile device, the whole thing would run right now. I'd help of course. (Important: I could also grant a non-GPL license to any platform vendor, to the original code release only.)
Nokia? Microsoft? Sony? Apple?

Sure, because all these companies (oh wait, I mean BigCos) are going to pay big bucks to port a little-known and little-used scripting language created by someone known far and wide for being easy to work with to their mobile devices instead of some popular language, you know, like say, Ruby, or Python. Hell, he's got open source, he's got closed source - you name it, he's got it.

You know, cause he'll help. Of course.

Note: the much vaunted interop does not mean "Do it my way."

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