Site icon Nick Bradbury

Feedback on IE7 Beta 2 from the Developer of FeedDemon

As most readers probably know by now, the second beta of Internet Explorer 7 is out, and it offers some nice improvements such as tabbed browsing and feed reading. I’m far too biased to comment on the actual feed reading experience in IE7, but I would like to make some unrelated comments for the IE7 team.

First off, I’m sure I’ll get questions from people wondering when FeedDemon will support the new Feeds API, but right now I’m afraid I don’t have a definitive answer for them. If I was just starting out with FeedDemon, I’d be happy to support it and avoid writing all the ugly code to handle feed downloading, caching, parsing, etc. But since I’ve already coded that, supporting the API requires a lot of extra work, so there’s less incentive to support it right away.

More importantly, I haven’t seen any statement about what Microsoft plans to do with the user’s feed (attention) data, and I can’t give customer data to Microsoft without some idea of how this data will be used. For the record, I don’t mean to suggest that they have “nefarious plans” here – it’s just that if an application is supposed to hand the user’s data over to Microsoft, some reassurance that this data won’t be misused is necessary.

Also, I’m concerned about how the feed API appears to let any application access the user’s feeds. I realize this is a beta and the documentation isn’t complete, but I do hope that there will be a way for the user to keep certain feeds private to specific applications. Related to this, how are secure feeds handled? Can any application read the user’s password-protected feeds, or is there some mechanism in place to protect against that?

Last point about the feeds API: I’m really glad to see that the raw XML of each feed can be accessed, but I’m not sure whether applications can store extra metadata in each feed. Is this possible, or does FeedDemon need to store this metadata somewhere else once it supports the API? I’d prefer that it be stored within the actual cached feed, so that different applications could read each other’s metadata.

OK, now that that’s out of the way, here’s a smattering of other feedback regarding IE7 Beta 2:

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