the Sam Jackson College Experience

all the exciting parts, none of the heavy debt burden

Should I publish an OPML file of my RSS subscriptions?

Reader Jay Collier recently contacted me and asked if I had ever considered publishing an OPML file of all my feed reader feeds. Feed Demon has such a feature, but I had never been able to really accurate gauge the ratio of reader-utility to pointless-egoism and had therefore refrained from posting one. But Jay inspired me to pose the question to all of you! So let me know and if there is any real interest I’ll clean up the output and share the long, long list of all the blogs I read.

I had a ‘real’ post that would have gone here, but I will run it in a day or so instead–answer the poll in the meanwhile, if you would be so kind!

{democracy:3}

Also, more people should follow Jay’s example and contact me and/or comment!

Update 11/30/07: OK, after a weeklong poll, an overwhelming response leads me to publish an OPML file of all the feeds I read. I’ll try to format something pretty and then post it next week. Thanks for voting!

Subscribe to RSS feed


Who is Sam Jackson?

photo headshot sam jacksonI'm currently a junior at Yale University and I've been blogging about college admissions and higher education marketing trends since I began my college application process in 2005. I now also write about my experience here at Yale. I just got back from studying abroad at Peking University this past Fall 2009 in Beijing, China! Click here to read my 'about' page.

Kind words about my blog:

Andrew Careaga calls it “a service to all of us in the higher ed marketing business.”

Christian Long says it has “dramatically inspired college admissions folks to take notice

Bob Johnson says “I like [it] because I agree with so much of what he says.” and that “Paying attention what Sam writes will let you focus more closely on students who will actually attend your school.”

Karine Joly says my witty and fresh style “offers a rare glimpse at the mind of our elusive prospective students

and TargetX calls my blog “good reading” and me “wise-beyond-my-years.”