May 16, 2008

People are noticing BlogBridge Feed Library

Filed under: BB Library — Pito Salas on 3:14 pm
Over the last week there were two very positive mentions of our Feed Library product which I would like to share with you.

First of all, on the always excellent App Gap blog, Bill Ives covers BlogBridge Feed Libraries, from the perspective of Enterprise 2.0. He says:

“The BlogBridge Feed Libraries can be the ’web content directories’ where users can browse and search for recommendations of content to read with their RSS Aggregators. The experts within your firm can place in the Feed Library the blogs and other sites that they feel will best address the issues that employees face as they deal with the topic cover by the Feed Library.

For example, one firm might have Feed Libraries on Marketing, Engineering, Human Resources and Manufacturing. Another might cover Biology, Medicine, Technology, Management, and Research. A bioresearch firm might have different libraries for subsets of Biology. It puts your experts in control of the recommendations for web reading. At the same time individuals can customize it with their own additions for their individual RSS feed lists.” (from BlogBridge Feed Libraries for Enterprise 2.0)

You should read the whole article, as it covers the product very nicely and from a broad perspective.

In a related post, Robert Brekman follows Bill’s post up, saying that he likes the concept:

“I recently came across a post that caught my eye that presents an interesting solution for serious researchers and for enterprise use of feeds that can help with this.” (from Intelligent Agent)

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August 29, 2006

Feed Library

Filed under: Uncategorized — Aleksey Gureiev on 8:37 am

Background

Organizations are continuing to embrace the world of RSS, blogging and feeds as a new model for learning, sharing and distributing information. There are pilot projects going on all over where users, members of the organization, employees are being given aggregators or taught to use the ones they already have (in Internet Explorer, FireFox, Safari etc.)

They are being shown how to use them to gather information and keep up with what’s going on. This comes from the realization that lots of mission critical and professionally useful information is available in more convenient and timely form through such feeds. The users eyes are popping when they see the power of this stuff. This is happening all around.

Picture 2-20

Invariably one of the very first questions that comes from these new users is: “This rss stuff is cool, but how can I find the good stuff? What do you recommend? How do we know what to look at?” That’s where our Feed Library comes in.

Here is a crucial point that many people will miss but is critical to understand the BlogBridge Feed Library: it is a piece of software that you can install on your own server, inside your firewall. It’s not the content of the library (the books,) it’s the software to organize the library (the building.)

Feed Library (FL) creates a flexible web based structure to showcase Feeds, Reading Lists and Podcasts to employees in your company, or members of your organization. It will be the ’store’ where users can browse and search for recommendations of content to read with their Aggregators. And, here’s the important point: these are recommendations by people in your organization for people in your organization.

Librarians from your own organization organize FL according to what makes sense to your own users. For example:

  • a section for Marketing, Engineering, Human Resources and Manufacturing.
  • Or perhaps in a different kind of organization, there would be sections for Biology, Medicine, Technology, Management, and Research.
  • Or again a different kind of organization, there might be sections for Policy, Government, Public Relations, etc.

You get the idea: the organization of your FL reflects what’s of interest to your users.

There is a whole lot of flexibility built into FL. Individual users can be given areas of library to manage, there is a place for biographical information about librarians, there is a built in announcements blog where you can communicate with your clients, you can completely change the look of the site to match your organizational web site, you can see what the most popular feeds are, and lots more. And of course, there’s RSS and OPML everywhere. So FL will play really nicely with your aggregators and related technology.

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June 8, 2006

Announcing Feed Library

Filed under: Announcements, Feed Library — Pito Salas on 10:25 am

I am really pleased to be able to tell you about the fruits of our labors over the last several months, a new software product we call Feed Library (BBL for now.) Over the coming days and weeks I will be posting lots more detail about it because there is a lot to it. Consider this the unveiling and opening salvo of information.

Background: Organizations are continuing to embrace the world of RSS, blogging and feeds as a new model for learning, sharing and distributing information. There are pilot projects going on all over where users, members of the organization, employees are being given aggregators or taught to use the ones they already have (in Internet Explorer, FireFox, Safari etc.)

They are being shown how to use them to gather information and keep up with what’s going on. This comes from the realization that lots of mission critical and professionally useful information is available in more convenient and timely form through such feeds. The users eyes are popping when they see the power of this stuff. This is happening all around.

Picture 2-20

Invariably one of the very first questions that comes from these new users is: “This rss stuff is cool, but how can I find the good stuff? What do you recommend? How do we know what to look at?” That’s where BlogBridge:LIbrary comes in.

Here is a crucial point that many people will miss but is critical to understand BBL: BlogBridge:Library is a piece of software that you can install on your own server, inside your firewall. It’s not the content of the library (the books,) it’s the software to organize the library (the building.)

Feed Library (FL) creates a flexible web based structure to showcase Feeds, Reading Lists and Podcasts to employees in your company, or members of your organization. It will be the ‘store‘ where users can browse and search for recommendations of content to read with their Aggregators. And, here’s the important point: these are recommendations by people in your organization for people in your organization.

Librarians from your own organization organize FL according to what makes sense to your own users. For example:

  • a section for Marketing, Engineering, Human Resources and Manufacturing.
  • Or perhaps in a different kind of organization, there would be sections for Biology, Medicine, Technology, Management, and Research.
  • Or again a different kind of organization, there might be sections for Policy, Government, Public Relations, etc.

You get the idea: the organization of your FL reflects what’s of interest to your users.

There is a whole lot of flexibility built into FL.  Individual users can be given areas of library to manage, there is a place for biographical information about librarians, there is a built in announcements blog where you can communicate with your clients, you can completely change the look of the site to match your organizational web site, you can see what the most popular feeds are, and lots more. And of course, there’s RSS and OPML everywhere. So FL will play really nicely with your aggregators and related technology.

This post is already much too long and I know there are lots of questions that I have left unanswered. More will be posted in the coming days so please keep an eye out. If you can’t wait, email me directly at rps@blogbridge.com and I will be glad to answer any questions.

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Announcing BlogBridge: Library

Filed under: BB Library, FAQ BBL — Pito Salas on 10:25 am

I am really pleased to be able to tell you about the fruits of our labors over the last several months, a new software product we call BlogBridge: Library (BBL for now.) Over the coming days and weeks I will be posting lots more detail about it because there is a lot to it. Consider this the unveiling and opening salvo of information.

Background: Organizations are continuing to embrace the world of RSS, blogging and feeds as a new model for learning, sharing and distributing information. There are pilot projects going on all over where users, members of the organization, employees are being given aggregators or taught to use the ones they already have (in Internet Explorer, FireFox, Safari etc.)

They are being shown how to use them to gather information and keep up with what’s going on. This comes from the realization that lots of mission critical and professionally useful information is available in more convenient and timely form through such feeds. The users eyes are popping when they see the power of this stuff. This is happening all around.

Picture 2-20

Invariably one of the very first questions that comes from these new users is: “This rss stuff is cool, but how can I find the good stuff? What do you recommend? How do we know what to look at?” That’s where BlogBridge:LIbrary comes in.

Here is a crucial point that many people will miss but is critical to understand BBL: BlogBridge:Library is a piece of software that you can install on your own server, inside your firewall. It’s not the content of the library (the books,) it’s the software to organize the library (the building.)

BlogBridge:Library (BBL) creates a flexible web based structure to showcase Feeds, Reading Lists and Podcasts to employees in your company, or members of your organization. It will be the ‘store‘ where users can browse and search for recommendations of content to read with their Aggregators. And, here’s the important point: these are recommendations by people in your organization for people in your organization.

Librarians from your own organization organize BBL according to what makes sense to your own users. For example:

  • a section for Marketing, Engineering, Human Resources and Manufacturing.
  • Or perhaps in a different kind of organization, there would be sections for Biology, Medicine, Technology, Management, and Research.
  • Or again a different kind of organization, there might be sections for Policy, Government, Public Relations, etc.

You get the idea: the organization of your BBL reflects what’s of interest to your users.

There is a whole lot of flexibility built into BBL.  Individual users can be given areas of library to manage, there is a place for biographical information about librarians, there is a built in announcements blog where you can communicate with your clients, you can completely change the look of the site to match your organizational web site, you can see what the most popular feeds are, and lots more. And of course, there’s RSS and OPML everywhere. So BBL will play really nicely with your aggregators and related technology.

This post is already much too long and I know there are lots of questions that I have left unanswered. More will be posted in the coming days so please keep an eye out. If you can’t wait, email me directly at rps@blogbridge.com and I will be glad to answer any questions.

Technorati Tags: ,

These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
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