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BTW, while I do like link blog aggregators, I consider them less of a destination than I do as a way to find stuff that you might've missed (see http://nick.typepad.com/blog/2007/08/link-blogs... ).
I wouldn't want to try to keep up with an endless stream from a link blog aggregator, but I might want to know when a few of my friends have paid attention to an article I haven't seen yet. LinkRiver appears to be starting to tackle this problem - will be interesting to see how that service evolves over the next few months.
I always have my external browser on my second monitor, so this works well for me.
Like I siad it's an off the wall thought that probably wouldn't even be used ecpet for cranky old farts like myself :)
Louis, I think that the gap you're talking about was left unfilled by Google intentionally - by now they must know there's little value in using shared items alone as a rating mechanism.
This becomes more evident as services such as ReadBurner and RSSmeme gain in popularity and add more and more linkblogs. The result is mediocre mixture of stale Techmeme headlines, irrelevant and silly Digg-style posts, random one-size-fit-all del.icio.us-like content, and of course, duplicate and redundant content.
Myself, I use three apps: Google Reader, Facebook, and Twitter. Anything else is a colossal time suck. When Internet apps stop making my work in this world useful, and instead BECOME my work, then I know it's time to pull back on the techno-horse.