Is FriendFeed Worth Its Salt?
There’s been a lot of buzz about FriendFeed ever since it’s private beta, particularly due to the folks behind FriendFeed, many of whom are former Google employees. (Hell, the design of the site even looks like they’re preparing for Google to buy them up whenever they’re ready.) So if you’ve given FriendFeed a try (or if you do after reading this), we want to know: Gawker Media polls require Javascript; if you’re viewing this in an RSS reader, click through to view in your Javascript-enabled web browser. Between the two somewhat distinct features FriendFeed offers (personal feed aggregation and friend-following), the personal feed seems much more useful. After playing with FriendFeed for a while and adding a few friends, I’m not sure I could ever keep up with the overflow of information that includes everything I’m doing along with every single thing my friends are doing online—especially not in one endless, unified stream. If you really don’t like FriendFeed but you’d still like to ag