Hi Ari,

This is just my personal opinion, but may be informative.

I do most of my blog reading these days in little snippets of off-time via my 
iPhone, while on or waiting for the bus, etc.    What I've noticed is that I 
tend to stick to blogs with complete texts on my iPhone and save blogs with 
truncated posts for reading on my computer.   I find that on my iPhone 
switching in and out of my Google Reader view is too much of a hassle, 
especially if I have to do this for every post on a particular feed.  I'd 
prefer to stay in the accordion interface that GReader provides, as I find it a 
more efficient way of reading posts from lots of different blogs.  In several 
cases, I have blogs organized as a group and don't read them individually. I 
also share posts with a close-knit group of friends on Google Reader,  which 
has it's own sharing features that are different than the ones included on the 
bottom of JWA posts.  

Maybe just me...I wonder if there are any good studies out there about blog 
reading habits on mobile vs. non-mobile devices. 
Is there any way to configure Feedburner to allow users to select short vs. 
long posts?   From my perspective that would be a better solution than limiting 
them to one choice.

Richard
rjurban at illinois.edu



On Aug 25, 2010, at 3:34 PM, Ari Davidow wrote:

> I just got a complaint from someone about our "truncated" RSS feed.
> Back in the day, we dutifully read the RSS 2.0 spec and put just a
> synopsis, or the first part of a post, into the feed.
> 
> I do note that I am seeing lots of posts where the whole thing has
> made its way into the RSS. I'm not fond of it--I liked being able to
> treat RSS more like a TOC and not have to wade through post-length
> text in which I wasn't interested. But I'm also old enough to pass as
> fuddy-duddy.
> 
> What are other people doing? Just put it all into RSS? Are you
> including HTML markup as well, or still sticking to plain text? Does
> it break anything?
> 
> thanks,
> ari
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