Thursday, February 19, 2009

RSS = Information Overload?

Does the use of RSS/RSS aggregators mitigate or aggravate the problem of Information Overload in today's society?

My personal experience with RSS and RSS aggregators has mitigated my information overload problem. Sure, I do still grapple with info overload, as you'll have noticed from my recent posts, but less so than I would without RSS feeds and a Google Reader account. I was checking several Web sites and blogs every day when a colleague said, "why don't you just subscribe to all of those feeds in Google Reader and save yourself some time?" I love that I don't have to check Web sites every day now; if there's something new, I'll know.

I also like that RSS and RSS aggregators help sift through the news for me, which certainly helps prevent IO and saves me time. For example, I can just subscribe to a few select NY Times feeds, rather than going to the NY Times Web site and clicking through several pages to find what I am looking for.

On the other hand, an RSS feed from something like Delicious, let's say, that draws your attention to Web sites you might not have ever heard of otherwise based on tags of your choosing, might aggravate the problem of information overload. Suddenly you are looking at everything tagged library and Texas and it's possible that sifting through all of that does not produce enough useful results to really make it worth the time and energy to do so.

There's also the little fact that RSS itself has led to the production of several RSS management tools like those we've learned about in class (FeedBurner, FeedDigest, etc.). So, indeed, it has increased the information flow in that respect. It's like when you have to start writing a manual about the manual for a copy machine!

I think I'm going to reserve making an overall "aggravate or mitigate" statement when it comes to society at large. Certainly, in terms of bits and bytes, RSS has led to the creation of more information, but I think whether or not it mitigates or aggravates the problem of information overload will vary widely between users.

1 comment:

Marie Piccoline said...

I agree--some aspects of too much information are mitigated, yet others arise. I can see why some newpapers are struggling to survive--I don't need the whole package anymore.