Feedly takes RSS into the tablet wars, great news reader, first look!

Feedly (an RSS reader built on top of Google Reader) has waned on my screens in the past year as Twitter has become more and more dominant. That’s why Steve Gillmor and others have stated that we think RSS is dead. Dead meaning “not interesting” NOT “dead like Osama.”

But for the past 18 months the Feedly team rewrote their system from scratch especially for tablets.

Why tablets? Well, duh. The world on tablets is exploding and this is where many people are doing their entertainment and news reading. Every night I sit on the couch flipping through apps like Flipboard and Zite, along with Twitter and apps from publishers like Time, New York Times, NPR, BBC, and Wall Street Journal.

So, do we need yet another news reader on our iPads? Well, the new Feedly shows me that yes we do. Watch Edwin Khodabakchian, CEO, show us why on this video first look. Yes, it’s long, but it’s worth it.

How about on Android tablets? Well, Feedly is one of a new kind of apps built mostly around HTML 5 with a little bit of native code to add features that only iOS or only Android can offer.

Within minutes, you’ll see lots of reviews, watch Techmeme for a list, but don’t miss out and get Feedly on your iPad. Get it on iTunes.

More coverage of Feedly’s new app:
1. on The Next Web.
2. on RWW.

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Getting inside Salesforce’s social acquisition strategy; interview of CEO of $340 million Radian6

http://www.cinchcast.com/cinchplayerext.swf

Marcel Lebrun, CEO of Radian6

Yesterday was Marcel LeBrun’s first day working for Salesforce. His company, Radian6, was just acquired for $340 million (Techcrunch reported it was $326, but LeBrun told me that was wrong and that $340 was the correct number).

By a fun coincidence last night I was hanging out with Empire Avenue and Seagate execs at the Ritz firepits — you can see a Photosynth I made last night with my iPhone of that area here — when I got a phone call from JP Rangaswami, Salesforce’s Chief Scientist. He said “look up” and I saw him standing in a window. That led to meeting Marcel for this interview where he gave me insights as to what Marc Benioff is up to with a group of acquisitions (JP just hired Kevin Marks) and JP told me they are planning other big hires.

We discussed several things in this 19-minute interview:

1. Where Radian6 will be used inside Salesforce Chatter (at Rackspace we’ve decided to use Chatter as our main “at work” social feed, so I’m interested as a customer). He says that Radian6 will let employees bring outside feedback right into their social feed. For instance, an employee at a car company could say “I want to see any Tweet that talks about buying one of our products” and those tweets would show up on their social feed inside Chatter.
2. Advice for entrepreneurs who want to follow Marcel and build a company that is valued at $340 million and what the impulse was for him to start Radian6.
3. Just how much the market has changed (the company started in 2006, back when they thought that blogs were going to be the important things companies would want to listen to — Twitter wasn’t yet known outside of SF geek circles and Facebook was still for college kids only).
4. How big the market potentially is for customer service. He notes that when Radian6 started very few companies were trying to use social media, now nearly every company is and he thinks we are still very early as companies try to find new ways to delight their customers.
5. Will compensation change inside companies due to how well we use social systems like Chatter? (Dups Wijayawardhana, CEO of Empire Avenue, a system that studies the value we put into these things, was standing nearby during this interview).
6. What to do with employees who build their own brand separately from the company.

Anyway, it was an interesting conversation and gives you some insights into what one of the leaders in the social world is thinking. Hope you enjoy.