How favit copes with the information overload?

Having read Steve Mollman’s great article for CNN: How can we cope with information overload?” I consider that I should add some more ingredients to it by describing the favit approach to end the information overload.

The major concept of favit is that the product has to cope with information overload on all levels. Filtering and reordering feeds was quite an easy task to do, but this was just the beginning of the game. A much more difficult task is to put a full lifestream in order, thus minimizing the “noise” from different networks.

People have limited processing powers and time, but we are good at finding new things based on connections, conclusions, and reactions to information we have already encountered. Machines, on the other hand, are great at filtering and organizing information. While these are familiar facts for everyone, unfortunately just a few of us know how to take the best of the two worlds and integrate them into a real-time web service that will make it possible for everybody – not just geeks – to win the battle against information overload. Happily, a few of those people are on board of favit which allowed us to integrate and apply the latest modern web technologies to the major sources on which people rely to receive information from:

  • Sources -we generally subscribe for stuff we can’t afford to miss (I put the save search here too). The wide and free availability of feeds however, made our readers explode. Subscribing became like bookmarking – with the purpose not to read the content but just to ensure that you can easily reach it if needed. Plus, the RSS readers are simply erroneously constructed as private services with limited interaction capabilities.
    In favit we applied a totally new approach to sources, starting by constructing our own reader and equipping it with tools (like filters & bundles) that made the content consumption, interaction, filtering, and sharing much easier and effective. Furthermore, our discovery section returns interest based suggestions not only for single feeds but for carefully curated user collections (bundles) and filters.
  • People & Groups – this part was harder. People are of much greater value but they generate more noise in their content streams. On top of that, the lifestream is more vivid and the interaction with it is more intense. After providing a true two-way integration with the major social networks, we applied the same logic from the reader – both people and groups can be part of a list and filters can be applied to the content that arrives from them. In that way, favit users benefit from everything that their friends discover without being overwhelmed with information and without the need to switch between different services or tabs.

We put these two major channels in a simple stream and laid the foundations of the tool that we believe will bring an end to the information overload. Of course, more things have to be done and optimized but we are definitely on the right track!

Related: Content is all around us. But why it is so difficult to get to it?

February 5, 2010

favit as both light blogging platform and a topics tracking tool

Today, Richard MacManus placed favit, together with the light blogging platforms tumblr and posterous, in the People Curated section of his Top Tools For Tracking Topics on the Web mash up.

favit covers the entire lightblogging spectrum by providing the necessary environment and tools for both content creation and content promotion, utilizing its two-way twitter & facebook integration.

Better yet, thanks to the favit statistics module, you can also learn about your readers and their behavior.

The lightblogging part of favit described above is just a small piece of the favit potential and abilities.

In this post I would like to digg deeper in Richard’s article and show you how you can use favit as a tool to track topics and trends on the web:

The numbers from the screenshot correspond to three ways favit allows its users to monitor things they can’t afford missing, even when browsing the latest stuff from their lifestream and subscriptions.

  1. This one is my personal favorite and it’s called the global favit filter – it  tracks many topics simultaneously and allows selection of the monitored sources.
  2. The favit saved searches – anytime a search is made on favit it can be saved and then efficiently monitored.
  3. The search section in the activity monitor panel – keeps track of recent searches and provides updates on  them.

The above position favit as a destination service for your tracking needs – this means that you will have to visit favit in order to find the results you need. Emphasis is also put on making favit a feed service – the rss feed from the search results is a good example of this.

Related:

Another post inspired by the RWW team: Sharing is caring in the feeds world too

RWW for favit in its “The Real-Time Web and its Future” report – “It blew our minds

January 21, 2010

Sharing is caring in the feeds world too

In the beginning of last week I found a really nice read on the RWW blog: 5 Reasons Why RSS Readers Still Rock, two points of the Richard MacManus’s article aroused my interest and I would like to extend them further with a few examples.

1. Filter RSS Streams

Probably we are all constantly facing one of the biggest handicaps about the RSS stream readers – the unread numbers (1000+).
We do subscribe to a lot of websites and find ourselves overloaded with content. The digits in bold keep bugging our mind and we feel like we are always missing something important. While in fact, when subscribing to a RSS emission, by default we do not intend to read everything.

Happily, things evolved and now by applying certain topic(s) to a bunch of sources we can filter their content and get only the stuff we really care about – take for example the Facebook and Twitter news filter that scans 17 carefully preselected top tech blogs for articles about Twitter and Facebook. In the last 24 hours all the 17 blogs published a total of 207 posts with just 29 posts about Facebook and Twitter. I have been spared 178 irrelevant post that would have otherwise turned into 178 unreads.

Filters can be of great help especially when facing one and only massive RSS emission from a certain source and we need a fast and reliable tool to filter it for the content that we are actually into. Things with filters and RSS are getting even better with the vast implementation of the PubSubHubBub protocol, which delivers you the articles in real-time.

2. Categorize News

Categorizing and putting our news feeds in bundles is great, but what use they have if you can not share them with friends? Now you can!
Take a look at the favit.com’s Infographs bundle including 24 awesome feeds related to infographics and data visualization, I have spent half a day researching and curating it, and I will be more than happy to share it my friends so they do not spend the same time in research, but in actually reading it and getting inspiration.

To summarize, I can now say that the “sharing is caring” principle so vastly implemented when sharing single articles have now, thanks to the favit.com developers stretched further to a field that we have erroneously considered private and personal as our Inbox, neglecting the fact that feeds are public and by default shared with everyone from the site that emits them – so go ahead and whenever you find a new interesting source share it with your friends – they will appreciate it!

January 12, 2010