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There's a learning curve there, education that has to happen, but does it really? Think about why AOL still thrives, though many "tech heads" may not find it useful at all: You can find the content you want easily. It is curated and presented to you, and in some cases you can personalize that content, like you can with Google News, or even the New York Times.
I think the adoption rates are there, and I'm going to try and track down the numbers for you, but loads of people are using "share buttons" and "widgets" etc, all again, without realizing that they're using RSS. We have to find a new way to talk about RSS perhaps, especially within this niche.
Your argument here though kind of points to the need for something like what GlobalGrind is doing then. BlackPlanet tried to do a digg like service, but the users had to submit all the news. What GG's advantage is in this regard, is a cadre of qualified editors and content types who can curate the content and aid the user in the discovery of new content and sites. The challenge for GG is getting its product out there in front of the masses within this niche. Right now, it's just the bloggers and early adopters, and watchers of Run's House that even know they exist.
Here's something from TechCrunch on end of year reporting on Google: "The star performer for the year was Google’s personalized start page service iGoogle which increased traffic in the 12 months to November by 267.64%." Imagine what the number looks like now. What about for MyYahoo?
There's even RSS use on Blackberrys, but again, I don't think people know they are using RSS.
Also reports and surveys show that the US has one of the highest RSS adoption rates in the world, though it trails other countries.
Again, I think the conversation needs to be had differently. I don't think we should ask people if they use RSS, we should ask them if they subscribe to sites, or if they use start pages like MyYahoo or iGoogle. If you look at traffic to major sites nowadays, bookmarked visits are dropping off while RSS visits are growing , as well as organic search (if the site has a good RSS and SEO strategy). And many content providers find RSS to be a viable option of supplementing their newsletter marketing.
The fact though, that at least one of your friends says they just check back in to see if the site updates tells me something else though -- perhaps you should have taken your survey further (if you did my apologies) to find out how many of them read blogs and how often they read them.
I could go on and on about this topic, but I'll stop here.
I tell them, the same way you can watch Family Guy on Fox, then TBS, that is called syndication. Then I tell them this is what RSS is, it allows your content to be syndicated elsewhere.
So i think it is a combo of 1, 2, and 4 to get user more aware of RSS.