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Every article I share on this blog starts the same way: in my RSS reader. I use Inoreader to follow about a hundred feeds—design blogs, tech publications, and independent newsletters. Every morning I scroll through what’s new, mark what’s interesting, and the best stuff eventually becomes a link post here. It’s not a fancy workflow. It’s an RSS reader and a notes app. But it works because the format works.

This is a 2023 article, but I’m fascinated by it because Google Reader was so influential in my life. David Pierce, writing for The Verge, chronicles how Google Reader came to be and why Google killed it.

Chris Wetherell, who built the first prototype, wasn’t thinking about an RSS reader. He was thinking about a universal information layer:

“I drew a big circle on the whiteboard,” he recalls. “And I said, ‘This is information.’ And then I drew spokes off of it, saying, ‘These are videos. This is news. This is this and that.’” He told the iGoogle team that the future of information might be to turn everything into a feed and build a way to aggregate those feeds.

Jason Shellen, the product manager, saw the same thing:

“We were trying to avoid saying ‘feed reader,’” Shellen says, “or reading at all. Because I think we built a social product.”

Google couldn’t see it. Reader had 30 million users, many of them daily, but that was a rounding error by Google standards. Pierce captures the absurdity well:

Almost nothing ever hits Google scale, which is why Google kills almost everything.

So Google poured its resources into Google Plus instead. That product was dead within months of launch. Reader, the thing they killed to make room for it, had been a working social network the whole time. Jenna Bilotta, a designer on the team:

“They could have taken the resources that were allocated for Google Plus, invested them in Reader, and turned Reader into the amazing social network that it was starting to be.”

What gets me is that the vision Wetherell drew on that whiteboard—a single place to follow everything you care about, organized by your taste, shared with people you trust, and non-algorithmic—still doesn’t fully exist. RSS readers are the closest thing we have, and they’re good enough that I’ve built my entire reading and writing practice around one. But the curation layer Wetherell imagined is still unfinished.

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