The interface doesn't work for every component of Feedburner -- if you need to access feed management or change certain settings, you can continue to use the old interface. The new interface -- which is accessible via feedburner.google.com/gfb/ -- shows real-time stats for clicks, views and podcast downloads from across your feeds.
This is really powerful, especially if you use the Feedburner Socialize service to auto-ping Twitter when you publish a post. This can let you track how users are referred and what RSS clients are being used to access feeds.
The stats take a lot of the information that used to be spread across multiple panels and put it into one interface. You can also view the last two hours of activity for a feed to see different waves of traffic and click-throughs.
The new Feedburner dashboard also has a new message center that displays notices if there are any problems with a feed or other things that you need to know.
We hope these new real-time tools and the improved interface are the start of some real momentum behind the Feedburner product. RSS might be going out of favor in a world of Facebook, Twitter and mobile apps, but publishers still need a central place to control and manage their content streams. Feedburner no longer does everything publishers need it to do, but there just aren't a lot of alternatives.
What do you think of the new Feedburner interface? Let us know.