Lazyfeed is a newish service that is currently being billed as the hottest feed reader if 2009, but the hype and the substance are chalk and cheese.
Lazyfeed at its core is a keyword tracker. Users punch in a keyword and they get feed content based on the word. A sidebar keeps a list of saved keywords, and the service auto-refreshes as new content comes in. As of today they also support RSSCloud, so the auto-refresh might actually has some semblance to real-time, at least if the content is coming in from WordPress.com.
It’s a neat keyword tracker, nice UI, and it’s simple to use. But in saying that, the emphasis should go on “keyword tracker” because that’s what Lazyfeed is: it’s not some you beaut whizbang RSS reader, it’s a keyword tracker that has a Twitter and Facebook button for sharing, not exactly a ground breaking idea.
While I can appreciate Lazyfeed for what it is, I just don’t get the hype around it. Maybe it’s a matter of timing: the Northern summer is always quiet, and Lazyfeed has jumped in at the right time, but I’m sure that’s not it (at least al