Google Reader Notes – A new form of micro-blogging.

The micro-blogging space has had trouble picking a winner. Tumblr has shown great promise in its wide user base and social features, while Posterous has had a bit of a technical lead with more formatting options and a high level of geek cred (TweetDeck uses Posterous as their primary blog).

One service that may have been overlooked however is the Google Reader “notes” feature. By creating notes in Google Reader, users who follow you will have your note dropped into their feed. You’re also given the option to add the note to your shared items, so casual browsers looking at your profile will be able to see it. I could easily see industrious geeks piping their shared items or just their notes into a blog platform like WordPress, Posterous, or Tumblr using RSS and some plugins.

If you spend a lot of time in Google Reader (which I will be doing again very soon), this may be a frictionless way to jot down your thoughts and get it “out on the wire” as fast as possible once you have the feed / data plumbing finished. Thoughts? Are others taking advantage of Google Reader’s “notes” feature for content publishing?

http://google.com/reader
https://posterous.com/
http://www.tumblr.com/

Article source: http://www.google.com/reader/item/tag:google.com,2005:reader/item/4c9277974c5e7ccb

About joelgibby
Joel Gibby lives near Portland Oregon and writes about a wide range of technology topics including social media, educational technology, web development, security and networking.

  • Anonymous

    I only now realized that Google Reader notes are not editable. This is still a quick, frictionless way to take notes when scanning feeds, and it was easy enough to incorporate it with my blog using the “RSS Poster” plugin. I’m sure there’s tons of other good RSS item poster plugins; know any?

  • http://twitter.com/justenmartian Justen Martian

    I found one called “RSS Poster”…. http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/rss-poster/

blog comments powered by Disqus