From The Blog

Replacing the RSS Reader: It’s All About the Conversation

After the initial launch of What’s up in Ruby, people were confused about what we were trying to accomplish. They saw the site as another...

After the initial launch of What’s up in Ruby, people were confused about what we were trying to accomplish. They saw the site as another search engine specific to the Ruby space.

That was my fault.

The confusion was understandable. The design of the site emphasized search, and the initial post I did was off track. We got to work right away on these issues and today are launching a major update to What’s up in Ruby.

The goals of What’s up in Ruby, and the series of niche sites we are launching, are:

  • Provide insight into the latest conversations going on within a context (topic)
  • Take our visitors to where those conversations are taking place
  • Allow our visitors to search for other conversation topics of interest to them, returning results that are only relevant to the context (i.e. not searching the entire Internet)

The updates we have done over the past week accomplish those goals. What we did was:

  • Update the design to emphasize the conversation items
  • Make the site perform a search when you click on a conversation item
  • Return results ordered by the number of times the conversation item is used
  • Add pagination to the results page to make browsing easier
  • Run our feed pull every four hours so you have the freshest conversation
  • All the code, all of it, is 100% Ruby and Ruby on Rails goodness

With this Beta 2 release we continue to choose all of the RSS feeds we pull. With 1.0 we will be asking for your suggestions of feeds that are relevant to the context. The more feeds we get the better the site becomes at informing of you what people are talking about.

Thank you all for your initial feedback on the site. Keep it coming!

Other Posts That Might Interest You

  1. You talked, we listened
  2. Making search better
  3. What’s up in Ruby? Now with RSS and Feedback

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  • Yeah, spam is a major issue at the moment. The code is still very young and being heavily worked on. Once we get things smoothed out for parsing blogs and such, we're definitely interested in adding other "conversation" areas such as mailing lists, twitter feeds, etc. Thanks for the suggestion!
  • Nick,

    Our filters are improving as we pull more from the feeds. Your point on pulling in forums is well taken. In a version to come we will have the capability for people to suggest feeds that are relevant to the context (in the case of whatsupinruby ruby and associated topics), that will be vetted (for spam) and added to our feed pull.

    Thanks for the feedback. Please keep it coming.
  • Nick
    I love how comment spam is getting into the meta tags of your "whats up in ruby" site.

    If you want to track conversations, it seems that it might be more useful to write a site than organizes traffic on ruby and rails mailing lists, since those places have even more content than blogs do and don't get effectively RSS'ed nearly as well as blogs do either.
  • Navjeet - hitting the "Enter" key after entering a search term works for me. What browser are you using?
  • Navjeet,

    Thanks for the heads up. We'll fix those two items right away.
  • Navjeet
    Also entering the search term and hitting "Enter" key does not bring back search results. One has to explicitly click on "search" button.
  • Navjeet
    BTW pagination is not working properly. I searched for term "video". It showed me page 1/2 but when i click on page 2 link or next it still shows the same results.
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