Tuesday
May132008
ReadBurner is coming out of its shell
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 at 12:28PM
I get very excited when I see new companies in the tech industry growing up (especially when I use them and they're in the Philadelphia area). ReadBurner is no exception. In the past few days, they've rolled out some great new features -- categorized popular this week, paging on certain pages, integrated comments and the latest is a partnership with NetVibes. This last one is exciting. From the ReadBurner blog, Adam writes:
While some may not understand why this is a big accomplishment, I feel that it is. They have a goal to let every user (that one's for Drew) know what's hot on the internet without regard to who says it's hot. This differs from Digg.com and the other content rating sites like Technorati by a large margin. Digg uses a system where people can vote something up but they don't even have to have viewed the site to do it and Technorati uses an authority system. This means that certain users and blogs have a higher likelihood of hitting the front page simply because of who or what they are. ReadBurner takes the guesswork out of this. No weights, no preference, simply sharing.
In addition of providing the top articles in different categories, they also allow you to quickly hop to both Google Reader and NetVibes to share more items right at the top of the screen.

While they have a long way to go before they are fully accepted, I think they're heading in the right direction. They have made an active choice to keep from moderating the information or removing articles that they don't like (see, lolcatz can make it up there each and every day). Keep an eye on these guys because they have some great stuff on the way.
This announcement gives you a bit of a taste of what we’re up to – analyzing what people are sharing across the Web on all sorts of different services. As such, our tagline has now changed to “what’s shared on the Web.”
While some may not understand why this is a big accomplishment, I feel that it is. They have a goal to let every user (that one's for Drew) know what's hot on the internet without regard to who says it's hot. This differs from Digg.com and the other content rating sites like Technorati by a large margin. Digg uses a system where people can vote something up but they don't even have to have viewed the site to do it and Technorati uses an authority system. This means that certain users and blogs have a higher likelihood of hitting the front page simply because of who or what they are. ReadBurner takes the guesswork out of this. No weights, no preference, simply sharing.
In addition of providing the top articles in different categories, they also allow you to quickly hop to both Google Reader and NetVibes to share more items right at the top of the screen.

While they have a long way to go before they are fully accepted, I think they're heading in the right direction. They have made an active choice to keep from moderating the information or removing articles that they don't like (see, lolcatz can make it up there each and every day). Keep an eye on these guys because they have some great stuff on the way.

Reader Comments (4)
Thank you for the support, it means a lot. We have a lot of things planned, and feedback like this helps us out for sure. When someone like Netvibes is interested in what you're doing you definitely take action. I've been using Netvibes a lot lately, helps me organize things.
"While Google Reader does not provide an API" - RSSmeme (similar to ReadBurner) does over an API: http://www.rssmeme.com/api/help/ ">http://www.rssmeme.com/api/help/
Definitely a good thing. Keep it up and one day I hope to be talking about RB buying the next startup.
Will most definitely have to take a look at it.