MichaelDotNet’s Leaderboard

If you haven’t heard, Techmeme has a new feature, the “Leaderboard“.  TechCrunch is heralding it as the defeating the last stronghold of TechnoratiRobert Scoble is lamenting the “death of blogging”.  Techmeme itself says the list consists of “Techmeme’s top 100 sources, including blogs, non-blogs, and everything in between”, so they’re not trying to be the sort of “Blog Authority” everyone else seems to be trying to make them. 

I don’t think Technorati nor blogging in general have anything to worry about.  Technorati is suppose to be aimed squarley at blogs, in this case I’m defining a blog as “The single and unfiltered voice of an individual”.   Techmeme’s Leaderboard is solely a list of the most newsworthy sites in a particular month, some of which just happen to be blogs. 

The best authority for the top bloggers is, of course, the bloggers themselves.  Until Google starts to release an aggregated form of their users’s Reader Stats (which may indeed herald the end of Technorati), we’ll have to turn to each other and Technorati will show us that.

In the interest of promoting tech blogs that deserve to be noticed, I provide you with my current personal “Tech Blog Leaderboard” based on my personal Reader trends:

 

  • MSDN Blogs:  Surprised?  You shouldn’t be, Microsoft employs alot of smart people, this is the best way to find out something you didn’t know before.  And it’s not necessarily Microsoft specific all the time.
  • Worse Then Failure:   Geeky humor, and great examples of what NOT to do for coders.
  • Slashdot:  Still a good resource after all these years, not a blog, yet still not on Techmeme’s Leaderboard either…
  • CodingHorror:  Everyone in development should be subscribed to this blog.
  • Scobleizer: Cause Robert Scoble always has neat stuff.
  • Robert’s Shared Items:  Doing all the crawling/subscribing so I don’t have to.
  • Jon Skeet’s Coding Blog:  Man knows his C#.
  • Evil Mad Scientist Laboratories: Cause deep inside we’re all evil geniuses.
  • Scott Hanselman’s Computer Zen:   I mean, doesn’t the fact he’s not on the Leaderboard make you question it just a bit?

That’s just a sampling, alot of webcomics and non-tech blogs in my reader too. 

What are some of your favourite/regular tech blogs? Is there anyone that I’m obviously missing that I just HAVE to subscribe to?

We did it! CodeMash #1!

Thanks to Christopher Grant for pointing out that CodeMash moved from #2 on Technorati’s search to #1:

CodeMash hits the #1 spot on Technorati's search!

Amazing! That kind of exposure can only be a good thing for this unique and wonderful conference.

CodeMash Number 2 Search on Technorati!

And has been all day:

codemash2technorati

Only “Colbert Oreilly” is higher. A Midwestern developer conference beating out iPhone says something, I think.

Google Waves To Digg And Others

With yesterday’s post from the googlereader blog detailing how they’ve added the new personal stats feature, a number of people have speculated on Google releasing the information in an aggregate form. As speculated earlier on this blog and others, Google may be in a position to compete in the social web with the likes of Digg. Of course this would require aggregate data on individual posts (which I’m sure they’re gathering). Another site that Google could easily compete with would be Technorati, the stats that they’re currently showing are for individual feeds, which usually correspond to an individual site. It would be trivial to provide a listing of most read and most shared feeds, those would be some interesting stats I think. Maybe call it Feedorati? Regardless, I’m expecting with 2007 to be the year of the Social Web that Google will be adding alot more social aspects to their services, and this is likely a step in that direction.