del.icio.us

Sucking in Delicious

I finally took a little time to update to the latest Feed API and start sucking in my Delicious links. I'm not quite ready to mix it into my Feedburner feed, since I want to do mapping of the link field to my "native" weblink type, as well as the tags aren't transferring across.

The big thing this enables is commenting on my delicious notes. Meta observations on the link in question. As Richard has previously noted, my Jaiku instance actually also provides this: a second permalink where comments are enabled.

All Consuming is the other web service that I'm definitely interested in sucking back in here. I've been keeping it fairly up to date with my reading, and I know lots of people that also like to read similar books. RSS as the simplest systems integration format. Fun times!

del.icio.us bought, ma.gnolia being built

I ran into Todd Sieling at Take5 Cafe today (our defacto Innovation Commons - sign up to put your money down now!). He's been working with a company down in the valley on something very timely -- a social bookmarking site called ma.gnolia. Todd actually briefed Roland and myself on this a couple of months back, and we were bitterly disappointed when we didn't get a live demo. Today, Todd clicked me through a couple of sample pages. What can I say? The design looks nice and polished, we quibbled a bit about what the semantics of "send a link" are and what icons should like, and so on. I'm looking forward to kicking the tires on it when it goes live some time in the new year, especially since its target is regular web users. Saying things like "get a del.icio.us account and subscribe to your private 'for:' feed in RSS" pretty much results in blank stares today...

So, can another (or any?) social bookmarking site succeed? Well, aside from arguing as Paul Kedrosky does that del.icio.us' installed base are "early-adopter geeks utterly unrepresentative of anything approximately a larger market than del.icio.us's current 300,000 supposed users". Of course, there are all sorts of interesting comments in that post going back and forth about whether buying del.icio.us was "worth it" for Yahoo, and I've actually changed my mind a couple of times because of the different viewpoints there.

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