How to read RSS feeds 50% faster on a UMPC or Tablet PC

Google_reader_3Recently, I’ve been asked by several jkOTR readers for RSS reader recommendations. It’s a matter of personal preference to be sure and after experimentation, I’ve stuck with Google Reader since early this year. I do such a large amount of feed reading on my seven-inch UMPC that I need something easy to navigate and use. With Google Gears now adding offline capability, it’s going to be hard to displace this service on my Q1P.

While Google’s RSS reader is among the easiest and quickest to navigate, it works best with the many keyboard shortcuts but there lies an issue with a slate-style UMPC or Tablet PC: no keyboard.

Sounds like the perfect scenario for programmable hardware keys, no? Many, if not most, slate devices offer some type of hardware key programming. Every model is different, but let me share the method I use on the Samsung Q1P running Vista. I’m using Samsung’s Easy Button Manager, but the concept can be applied to whatever application your device supports for hardware buttons.

First off, I spent a good few days using Google Reader with a standard notebook and keyboard. Why did I do this? Two reasons: first, I wanted to see which keyboard shortcuts I used most in my workflow. Second, I had tried to use my Bluetooth keyboard and UMPC with Google Reader but the shortcut keys didn’t work for some reason.

Once I knew which shortcuts I used the most, it was just a matter of creating a new shortcut group in Easy Button Manager: I called mine "Google Reader". Hey, you don’t get extra points for creativity, but you might get them for productivity in this exercise. :)

Based on my usage pattens, I use the next and previous feed item shortcuts the most. Pressing J and K quickly moves me through items in a feed, essentially moving me up and down a list. Logically then, I assigned these to the "up" and "down" keys; technically these are the U1 and U3 buttons.

The next-used shortcut I use is the S key, which stars items for later: these are the ones I revisit for blogging or reading in full. I assign the "left" button, or U4 for this purpose, leaving me one last available key: U2. For a few hours, I couldn’t decide what to assign here, but the answer hit me after I further evaluated my reading habits. I realized that full feeds required scrolling on the 800 x 480 screen, so I actually assigned a standard web browser shortcut: the spacebar. Tapping this button scrolls the feed page down so I can keep reading without any interruption.

In the end, here’s what my key mapping looks like:

Google_shortcuts

If you use Google Reader on a UMPC or slate Tablet PC, should you use the same mapping? It all depends, and I highly recommend you evaluate how you navigate though Google Reader or whatever RSS reader you use. Once you’ve done that, you’ll know what shortcuts you need and what shortcuts you can live without. I can say that I get through my feed items at least 50% faster with these keys as opposed to tapping and scrolling on the screen. Give this approach a try and see how much time you save!

Related research and analysis from GigaOM Pro:
Subscriber content. Sign up for a free trial.