(
Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın) - Slashdot.org plans to release on Thursday a new feature designed to give more participation in the selection of articles to its users

who submit links to stories and comments about them to the site.
Called Firehose

the new interface lets readers see

for the first time

all the news articles that flow into Slashdot for evaluation by the site's editors. Additionally

readers will be able to vote on whether specific articles should or shouldn't be featured on the site.
"Before

if we chose not to post something

it was gone

and no one else saw it again

" said Patrick McGarry

Slashdot project manager.
Firehose will contain stories submitted for consideration by readers

as well as the :-):-):-):-):-):-):-) of automatic feeds. Readers will be able to tweak their Firehose view by filtering the :-):-):-):-):-):-):-)s using different parameters

and may opt to use Firehose as their main Slashdot interface. They will also be able to share their Firehose views with other users.
However

despite the increased participation for readers

Slashdot editors will still have the last word on which stories are featured on the site's home page

McGarry said. "Anything going to the front page has to be vetted by an editor

" he said.
Anyone will be able to see the Firehose repository of submitted articles

but in order to vote on stories

users have to register with Slashdot. Registration is free.
With these changes

Slashdot

which is part of OSTG Inc.

is catching up to so-called "social news" features that have made sites like Digg Inc.'s
Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın extremely popular.
Digg has increased its popularity significantly in the past year

according to Web measurement statistics from Hitwise Pty. Ltd. For the week ending Feb. 24

Digg ranked first in Hitwise's IT News and Media category with 10.8 percent of visits to sites in this category

while Slashdot grabbed 22nd place with 0.75 percent. A year earlier

in the week ending Feb. 25

2006

Digg ranked in sixth place with almost 4 percent of visits

while Slashdot had the 11th spot with 1.33 percent.
Others that have seen Digg take market share away are PC World and Cnet

which ranked first and second

respectively

in this category

in the week ending Feb. 25

2006. That week

PC World had 9.5 percent of visits

and in the comparable week this year it had fallen to third place with 6.7 percent. Cnet had 9.28 percent and kept its second place in the comparable week this year

albeit with a smaller 6.8 percent share. (PC World is owned by IDG

the parent company of IDG News Service.)
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