It’s a problem that’s basically the inverse of the one web pages had. It’s the finding of podcasts that’s hard. Podcasting has dozens if not hundreds of “Readers.” It’s easy to subscribe to any podcast about which you already know. If what Pocket Casts offers for curation and discoverability is in the upper echelons of the podcast world, then the podcast world is in a dire state. It’s odd b/c I’m a very frequent user of Pocket Casts, and I was under the impression that Pocket Casts makes absolutely no effort toward curation and discoverability. I found it odd that every piece I read about Pocket Casts last week mentioned that it was a well-liked app partly due to its discoverability and curation features. What made people love Google Reader was the ability to “subscribe” to those resources they found useful in case the same site published more they found interesting. Further helping the web’s popularity explode was the ability to search for something that interested a user and usually discover at least one resource relevant to their interest (Discovery). What helped the Web grow so massively was the users’ ability to follow links from sites that already interested them to discover other sites relevant to their interests (Curation). It got me thinking about what I’d recommend to Matt Mullenweg, CEO of Automattic, if I were running the Pocket Casts product strategy. Meanwhile I also read this piece about Google Reader and how much many of its enthusiasts miss it (myself included). Which caused me to eventually find and read this newsletter item on the same merger.Read this piece on the news that Automattic, owners and operaters of the WordPress empire, bought Pocket Casts.
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