Thursday, March 14, 2013

Google spring cleans Reader out of existence, also trashcans some CalDav, Snapseed for Mac

Google spring cleans Reader out of existence, also trashcans some CalDav, Snapseed for Mac

As part of their "spring cleaning" effort, Google today announced the cancellation of several services, including Google Reader, CalDAV API access (unless you're white listed), Snapseed for Windows and OS X, Search API for Shopping, and more. The trashcannings were announced by Urs H?lzle, senior vice president of technical infrastructure on the Google blog:

We?re living in a new kind of computing environment. Everyone has a device, sometimes multiple devices. It?s been a long time since we have had this rate of change?it probably hasn?t happened since the birth of personal computing 40 years ago. To make the most of these opportunities, we need to focus?otherwise we spread ourselves too thin and lack impact. So today we?re announcing some more closures, bringing the total to 70 features or services closed since our spring cleaning began in 2011.

This, of course, has caused wide-spread anger in geek circles, and a more nuanced reaction among the mainstream: "Um, what's Google Reader?" "Dunno, ask a geek!" "You ask them!" "Fine, I'll @{somecelebrity} on TwitterBook for it!"

Apple removed Safari RSS and Mail RSS last year in OS X Mountain Lion. Clearly, people who use and love RSS are not a growth industry, or even a viable target for either company any more. And that makes sense. RSS is the file-system of news, in a post-file system world. It's fantastic infrastructure, but the front end needs to evolve beyond traditional reader apps.

That sucks for those of us who loved the sync capabilities Google Reader provided for iOS newsreader apps like Reeder (pictured above), NetNewsWire, etc. Unless something with Google-level capacity steps up to fill the gap, we likely won't enjoy anything as freely available (in both senses of the word) again. That might also have been part of the problem. Reader was free. It wasn't a product. There was no commercial bond. We got what we paid for.

I'll mourn Google Reader, as I mourned Safari RSS, but the writing on the internet could not be clearer -- we need to find something else now, right?

(Ally's going to write up a how-to on exporting Google Reader content, and alternative ways to get RSS, and get your news in general. Keep an eye out for it.)



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheIphoneBlog/~3/gUUhWaL-JuQ/story01.htm

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