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blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000

Sometime during the day on Labor day, the .Text engine running blogs.msdn.com and weblogs.asp.net changed for the worse. 

Now, in my RSS reader, if a post is over a few lines long, the rest gets cut off, and you see a very annoying (read more) link.  Now, it's just like the news RSS feeds that give you a headline but make you click to see the rest of the article.  They want a visit to the website so that the advertising dollars come in.  I have no idea what this change is supposed to accomplish but to lower the number of readers of weblogs.asp.net.  I know that I don't click on “read more“ links, and I'm really glad that .Net Junkies doesn't do this. 

I want all the content in my RSS Reader, not on a website.  That's the point of aggregating instead of “headlining“.


Posted 09-07-2004 10:29 AM by Jeffrey Palermo

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Comments

Scott Galloway wrote re: blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000
on 09-07-2004 8:24 AM
Totally agree, seems completely arbitrary. I can see the point in reducing the size of the main page; though just ditching the names list down the left - as they have done, reducing the number of items and applying compression would have been much more useful. Oddly Microsoft seem to have a blind-spot when it comes to IIS compression. Doing this to the RSS feed though is just plain stupid, it'll actually increase their bandwidth use as to see the story you now have to visit the main site. Only thing this would make sense for is if they were planning on introducing advertising to that site - which would suck!
Scott Allen wrote re: blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000
on 09-07-2004 9:03 AM
I agree - it is very annoying. I like having the full text of the post in my aggregator. I don't like launching IE left and right to read the last sentence of a post.
David Cumps wrote re: blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000
on 09-07-2004 11:30 AM
Ah, that's why I suddenly felt strange when reading the feed!
Scott wrote re: blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000
on 09-08-2004 1:49 AM
"They want a visit to the website so that the advertising dollars come in."

They aren't running any ads on blogs.msdn.com though. In fact the only thing on their pages that you could even consider possibly being an ad would be the "powered by" links at the bottom of the page, which you are also running here at dotnetjunkies.

It's still bad form to have the "read more" link in the RSS feed(?!), but it's not to drive in ad revenue. It's more likely to cut down on bandwith. I'm sure Scoble will be giving them heck about it this week. He hates not having full text in the RSS feed.
Scott wrote re: blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000
on 09-08-2004 1:51 AM
whoops, hit "submit" too soon. IIS compression is pretty flakey Scott, I've had problems on web sites, granted they were running IIS 5, before when I've turned it on. Mostly flakey problems with images and IE.
Yex wrote Re: blogs.msdn.com's usability just went down the drain - level 000
on 09-08-2004 1:57 AM
I couldn't agree more. I can't stand that feature. I posted a question about this to the Community Server :: Blogs forum (http://www.communityserver.org/ShowPost.aspx?PostID=459910) and it seems this feature will be configurable in future versions of the software that generates those feeds, which will be nice. But at the same time, I don't like the fact that they've stripped down the content of those feeds though, what a drag. As was said, it doesn't even make sense, because there's no ads on the site(s).