Keeping busy

Published 8/19/07

Blogging has been light here lately as I’ve been working on another project. I mentioned it here before, and it’s sort of taken off: http://www.thisisroanoke.com.

Originally my plan was to make a site for getting local news here in Roanoke quickly; who needs to read how three random people feel about the new parking rates when all you need to know is how much you’ll have to pay?

But then I discovered how easy it was to aggregate news feeds from all sorts of local news sources — mainstream ones and bloggers. Suddenly (i.e., in about three days) I had built a pretty decent news site.

Then those local bloggers noticed, and started telling other people. And then I found myself getting e-mail from people asking to be included, or simply saying, “Cool site.”

At this point the site is 98 percent self-sustaining, although I can’t help but tweak it a bit. If nothing else it’s an experiment in viral advertising. No local news source will mention it, of course, even though I’m sending them traffic. So the only way people are finding it is when other people tell them.

* * *

At the heart of it, I’m amazed at what kinds of free software is available. Want to pull in feeds from all over? No problem! Want to merge 10 feeds into one? Easy! Want to integrate Craigslist classifieds? Simple!

I can certainly understand why local media companies are worried. Many of them are stuck using software that isn’t easily integrated with Web technology. Others can can use the stuff but can’t spare the staff-hours to implement it. Others have such large (or stodgy) bureaucracies that they can’t take advantage of it. Others have old-fashioned ideas about what people want or what the “new media” can do.

And, of course, there’s the competition angle. An aggregation site is happy to pull in content from wherever, and link people to anyone. But if you’re a TV station or newspaper you probably won’t bring yourself to work with you competitors that way.

So I put in a few days’ work, developed the site, and now I’m gonna sit back and see what happens.

Add to del.icio.us Digg it! Add to Technorati Add to Furl Add to reddit Stumble it!

The Fray


Miranda says:

love the picture you used for the banner…

August 19th, 2007 at 6:41 PM

Andrew says:

Funny — I got that from Microsoft Live Local’s maps. They’re better than Google’s, and the aerial photos are terrific.

August 19th, 2007 at 9:41 PM

Leland says:

Nice work Andrew.

August 19th, 2007 at 10:09 PM

Gnomic says:

I love it - and hate it. Great presentation, but we miss you (I’d be the beaver in this commercial)

August 19th, 2007 at 10:47 PM

Patrick Beeson says:

I just wrote a blog entry about you rolling your own news site. Keep it up!

(And let me know if I can help.)

August 24th, 2007 at 9:50 PM

Ben R. says:

The column used for “From This is Roanoke” is too narrow. Otherwise, very clean! And probably a lot more fun than Tech Decisions.

August 28th, 2007 at 11:08 AM

Andrew says:

You’re so vain — you prob’ly think this post is about you…

(It ain’t.)

August 28th, 2007 at 1:46 PM

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