subscribe to my brain

By lieven

or rather, I’d like to subscribe to your brain! But I figure you’d allow this (at best) only on a ’share-alike’ basis so let me take the first step. Maybe you already have your newsaggregator pointed to this weblog, but what if you could be able to follow all traces I leave on the web (or at least those you feel like following)? It’s a great idea which started off with a couple of posts. Like John Resig’s Life as RSS

A little while ago I began to realize just how much of my personal information is digitally created every day. This is both scary and enticing (to me). Scary, due to the fact that people can harness this information for evil/marketing. Enticing because I should be able to (theoretically) harness this information to provide a better user experience for the people who care (me and my friends, I assume). So, the other day I sat down and tried to figure out every accessible data medium that I generate and have access to.
… My masterplan: Essentially, an RSS aggregator (makes sense, nothing special) that pulls all of my personal RSS feeds into one place and provides an overall statistical view of the information that it contains. I may even provide some detailed information, save for things in the ‘Personal’ category. What I like about this is the fact that most of this information is completely public (or is possible to make completely public) - they’re all using common/widely available programs or tools. So, stage one: Set up a personal life browser - stage two: Open it up for the world to play with.
soon to be followed upp by Lost Boy’s My Life in RDF and continued by Louche Cannon I want to subscribe to your brain
The other day I was talking to a former colleague and I was trying to explain how I have gradually switched to using an assortment of social content tools as my primary mechanism for finding relevant and authoritative information on the web. With these tools, I can subscribe to an assortment of RSS feeds produced by people who I trust and think of as authorities in their respective subjects. In short, I said, “I can subscribe to their brains”.
Or at least I can in theory! At the moment, for those of non-geekly tendencies, the practicalities of “subscribing to somebody’s brain” are a little daunting. If you have an RSS-aware browser or have installed one of the useful bookmarklets provided by the likes of bloglines, then subscribing to individual RSS feeds is relatively easy. The problem is that I might be interested subscribing to:
- What person X is blogging
- What person X is bookmarking- on several social bookmarking sites (e.g. del.isio.us, CiteULike, Furl)
- What person X is listening to (e.g. AudioScrobbler)
- What person X is taking pictures of (e.g. Flickr)
- What person X’s travel schedule is (e.g. iCal)
- What books X is reading or planning on reading (e.g. Amazon wish lists)
The first problem is finding out what feeds person X provides. Most of the time you have to ask them, or search through the individual services for the person’s name. If you are dealing with a relatively clued-in person, you might be lucky enough to find links to their various feeds off of their home page or in the margins of their blogs. If you are dealing with an uber-geek, then you might find this information encoded in their FOAF file. All that seems to be missing is the button titled “Subscribe to X’s Brain”.
While it is still a Work In Progress (and will continue to be for some time as I’d like to get used to the idea and explore its possibilities) you’ll find a button to ’subscribe to my brain’ on the buttom left. Look out for this : Click on it and you’ll stare at a text-file. Save it to your desktop, fire up your Newsaggregator (which I assume is something like NetNewsWire ). Look under ‘File’ for ‘Import Subscriptions’ and open the saved BrainLeBruynL.opml-file. It will make a folder with name the present date&time but you can always rename the folder to something like ‘Lieven’s brain’… Then you will look at something like
which will give you a pretty good idea of what I was upto just now (posting a few references on Cuntz and Berest to CiteULike while listening to Rebekka Bakken via iTunes. If you’ll open up the folder you get an even clearer picture which tells you that since last time I’ve posted three new references to CiteULike,I listened to at least 10 new songs (Audioscrobbler only remember the last 10 ones) and that there is one new post here! You can also check on my recent bookmarks at del.icio.us and over the next few weeks you may also detect activity in a few other places (and I may add an arXiv scraper just in case you think I’m not posting there anymore). Clearly, it is up to you to unsubscribe to those regions of my brain you don’t care to follow but the overall picture may give you a pretty accurate picture of my present ’state of mind’. In the coming posts I’ll take you through the process of setting up a ’subscribe to my brain’ for yourself and I’ll explore (for myself) some of the possible uses of this scheme. The ultmate aim being to see buttons like appear on your site as well!

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4 Responses to “subscribe to my brain”

  1. added to MyBrain : arXiv | neverendingbooks Says:

    [...] someone who subscribed to your brain shouldn’t have to check the arXiv every morning only to find out that you still haven’t [...]

  2. my lifestream | neverendingbooks Says:

    [...] old concept of getting your brain subscribed to has a reincarnation into the lifestream idea : add a page to your blog listing all your timed [...]

  3. get your brain subscribed to | neverendingbooks Says:

    [...] the ‘subscribe to my brain’ post I promised to blog on how-to get your [...]

  4. yahoo pipes on iTouch | neverendingbooks Says:

    [...] posted before on setting up your own lifestream, or your own planet, or scraping feeds, or subscribing to my brain, or … whatever. The good news is : all these ideas are now superseded by [...]

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