Year: 2013
The Best Google Reader alternative
It was only back in December that I pondered this but with the news that Google Reader is to shut down I find myself revisiting some of those choices.
I still use Google Reader heavily, I consume it mostly through the website itself and via Reeder on my iPad, so it’s annoying that they are pulling this service.
But, as the adage goes, you get what you pay for, so I find myself, once again, revisiting the ‘what am I willing to pay for’ line of thought.
There are a few alternatives to Google Reader out there, I’ve tried some myself in the past, and already the tech blogs are offering their ‘best alternatives to’ posts.
But for me, the new consideration has to be whether I have the option to pay for the service with the hope that it offers a level of protection against the service disappearing on me. It’s either that or roll my own, or perhaps a 3rd party option like Fever (I have a server, and it is an option I might look at when I have more time, i.e. probably never!).
So far, of the many suggestions, the one I’ll be trying is NewsBlur precisely because it has a ‘paid for’ option.
As well as the specific impact of Google closing Reader to those that use the service, the fact that a company as rich as Google is (rightly) shutting down services that it sees no value from is a trend that is likely to start to pick up momentum.
Instagram prompted my original post on the “Going Paid” trend, how long before FaceBook push that application behind a paid for subscription?
Time will tell how this trend will pan out, but one thing remains constant and that’s the ever shifting nature of social media applications and their usage models.
Bad Motorist
You couldn’t make it up.
One day after berating a bad cyclist, I have the perfect example of how to be a bad motorist.
Part of my commute crosses a small, narrow, humpback bridge. It’s an old bridge, with high solid stone walls. Visibility is nil from either side.
Obviously this is the perfect place for an oncoming car to try and overtake a cyclist on the road. He was a couple of feet across the white lines, so how I missed him on one side, and the wall on the other, I have no idea. I did, out of the corner of my eye, see the cyclist wobble a bit as the car cut back in so I’m guessing he almost knocked the cyclist off too.
Stunningly stupid, dangerously reckless.
Cyclists 1 – Drivers 1!
But no, this will not be a theme of posts as, frankly, I could probably start up a separate blog on this topic alone! Instead I’ll give you the top two links you get when searching for “Bad cyclists bad motorists”.
- Bad Drivers – a list of examples compiled by a user called Cycling Addiction
- Bad Cyclists – a montage of examples compiled by a user called StoryOfBike
Which prompts the question, if cyclists are calling out other cyclists, where are the drivers calling out other drivers?
Bad Cyclist
I was driving to work this morning and witnessed a minor incident that irked me.
As I approached a pedestrian crossing the lights were changing back to green and by the time the car in front got to them, they had been green for a couple of seconds.
That didn’t stop a cyclist, cycling on the pavement and across the road at the pedestrian crossing almost getting taken out as he only started crossing the road when the light changed to green. I saw it happening from a distance and braked but the car in front of me had to slam his brakes on (there were others cars in the left lane, likely blocking his view).
The cyclist, once he’d gotten across the road. Stopped, turned and started shouted at the car in front of me as it drove off.
As, by that point, I was level with the cyclist I had half a mind to have a go at him!
Now, I cycle, not as often as I should, but when I do a lot of it is on busy roads. I have cycled to work and I think I have a fair grasp of roadcraft. I’m not the best cyclist, but neither am I the best driver.
I also know that this incident is probably not that common.
Unfortunately I think it’s this type of thing that sticks in the minds of the (pro) drivers and the (pro) cyclists. The driver probably drove away thinking “bloody idiot cyclist” and the cyclist was probably thinking much the same about the driver (despite being in the wrong!)
To all drivers, please be vigilant. Not every road user will use the road properly and you are in a large hunk of metal that can hurt and kill. Be mindful of that.
To all cyclists, please try and obey the rules of the road. I realise that jumping that red light, or using the pavement and a pedestrian crossing to cross the road is an easy option, but it’s dangerous (and I’m pretty sure it’s illegal).
A wee bit of give and take and the roads can be usable by all of us.
(I really don’t like writing this kind of preachy bollocks, I know it won’t make an ounce of difference, but it pissed me off!)
- If You’re Too Busy to Meditate, Read This
- Still Abiding After 15 Years: The Laid-Back World of ‘Big Lebowski’ Worship – Ashley Fetters – The Atlantic
- Hugo Chavez is dead. Here’s what happened when Christopher Hitchens visited him with Sean Penn in 2008. – Slate Magazine
- Web-connected cars bring privacy concerns – The Washington Post
- Elizabeth Kolbert: The Science of Sleeplessness : The New Yorker