They say Digg is bigger than Slashdot than these days. Bigger, better, newer, 2.0 and what not.
Indeed, I find myself scanning the Digg front page more often than Slashdot's ditto. Far too often, actually. Obsessively often? Well well, I actually get proper work done now and then.
Still, it's simply not true that the quality of the "news" on Digg's frontpage is higher than the news on Slashdot. On the contrary, Digg suffers from a disgusting amount of mob mentality. Half of what's on the front page is not news at all, merely short text snippets propagating rumours that everybody's already heard or views that most people already agree with. Which is why they get digged to the front page: people like to hear/read what they already believe in.
And this is not really a problem with Digg, it's a problem with people. (And like all problems we can't really do anything about, it's not even worth thinking of it as a problem, just as a fact.)
Slashdot, on the other hand, has sometimes-competent editors that sometimes put an effort into selecting and editing stories. While I might learn something I didn't already know from either Digg or Slashdot, I'm far more likely to learn something new about something I didn't already know anything about from Slashdot. Crucial difference.
So, back to the question: Why do I keep reading Digg when Slashdot is better? Because the Digg is updated more often, and the items are shorter. It's that simple. I think.
You've inspired me to visit Slashdot more often like I used to. And Digg v3 was released yesterday, not v2.
ReplyDeleteBecause digg updates its front page far more often than slashdot. More stories means more scanning.
ReplyDeleteHave you tried reddit?
ReplyDeleteWill: "And Digg v3 was released yesterday, not v2."
ReplyDeleteI think he meant it as in "Web 2.0" - you know, collaborative, AJAXy, user-created content and all that other cyberbabble art-wank.
Even though Slashdot's finally updated its HTML/CSS, the content-submission model (paid editors, moderation of comments only, etc) is still very 1997. I've already run into people who look down on it for being too "Web 1.0", and that's only set to get more prevalent as time goes on...
Julian: Incidentally, hello from a (fellow?) Essex graduate! You look vaguely familiar, but I don't know if you were there when I did (CompSci, 1997 onwards) or if I've just seen you around the campus in passing in the intervening time. Ever go to Discord(/Lithium/Gas/Indie Night) or the Anatidaephobia events in the Underground?
Either way, hell of a coincidence, to run into the blog of a fellow Essexian by way of a US news-aggregator (reddit.com - I prefer it to Digg).
Anyway, enough rambling - good luck with the PhD - I nearly ended up doing something very similar at Essex too.