| ||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||
RSS & How to Use It (part 1)
Have you ever read an article, intended to explain RSS in simple terms that, begins well, but soon descends into confusing jargon or information overload? If so, take heart, I was in the same place a few months ago. Often the best way to understand something, is to use it. RSS is no exception. So rather than try and create a definitive explanation of RSS, this article will tell you how to use it. I guarantee once you've done so, everything will that much clearer. If a website you visit utilizes RSS, there are a number of ways it will communicate this. The most common way is to show a little orange button with the letters XML. Alternatively, you may see words such as "ATOM", "RSS", "Site Feed" or variations on these. What they have in common is that they will link to a webpage that, in most browsers, looks like gibberish. It doesn't matter one way or another, what is important is the address of the web page they link to. To demonstrate, I will relate how to read a site feed for my website, The Nettle Blog. Don't confuse RSS with blogs (web logs). They are two separate concepts. The only reason you see them together so often, is that blogs are the perfect website to take advantage of site feeds. More on that later. Here we go? Click on this link to go the site feed for The Nettle Blog. Ignore the content in the window, just make a note of the URL in the web address bar. It should read: http://feeds.feedburner.com/thenettle Now you've got the web address for the site feed, keep it safe somewhere. You'll need it again in a moment. The next step is to use an RSS reader to make sense of the site feed. There are lots of these available and if you are a heavy user you would probably want to purchase a nice piece of software. But to begin with, start with something simple and free. Start with Bloglines. Go to www.bloglines.com/register/ and create a new account. From the "My Feeds" section of your account you can add new site feeds you want to keep track of. Select "ADD", enter the URL you copied and hit "Subscribe". You can preview the results, but skip that stage for now. Select "Subscribe" again and the title of the site feed will be transferred to the left-hand window. Well done. You have now subscribed to your first RSS feed. To read it just click on the title and you can view all the messages in that feed within a selected time period. The feed will most likely record news related to the website the feed belongs to. In this instance, the site feed to The Nettle Blog records each new entry to my blog. If you find something of interest, most entries have a clickable link you can follow. Anytime you find a website you like with a site feed, make a note of the URL for that site feed and add it to your Bloglines folder. Now comes the clever bit. In the left-hand column of your account is an "Extras" list. Select Download Notifier and choose the correct file to download the Bloglines Notifier This file is only 100k so any half-decent connection should complete the download in just a few seconds. If the download is successful, you should see a small, blue icon with the letter "B". Double-clicking it will short-cut you to Bloglines. Right-click on the icon and you can adjust the settings. Specify how often you want Bloglines to check messages for you. When Bloglines checks your site feeds and finds that one or more have been updated, a little chime will play and the Bloglines icon will show a little red marker. This means one of the feeds you have subscribed to has something new to say. So there you have it. A spam-free, hassle-free way to keep track of websites you have an interest in. Providing of course, that they have a site feed. If they don't, ask them why not. Part two of this article will show webmaster and ezine publishers how they can easily publish a site feed for their website and track the visitors, free of charge. David Congreave is owner of The Nettle Ezine, the newsletter for the home business -- online. David lives in Leeds, in the United Kingdom with his wife Leanne.
MORE RESOURCES:
Blogging-RSS - Google News |
RELATED ARTICLES
How RSS Advertising Can Help Business Gain A Higher ROI I recently read the case study conducted by Pheedo, an advertising company on the use of RSS Feeds advertising versus email advertising.The difference in results were staggering. Is a Blog Right For Your Business? Lemmings are cute, but dumb. If you tell them to jump off a cliff, they will. RSS Feeds, What They Are and How to Use Them What does RSS stand for?RSS "Really Simple Syndication" was created in the 1999 to allow information to be published and subscribed to. RSS basically takes bits of up-to-date information from websites and provides it in concise simple text based format. RSS Can Keep You In The Loop When webmasters first hear about RSS they tend to concentrate on the promotional side of things. They want to know how it will bring more traffic to their site and get them higher rankings in the search engines. How Blogs Can Be An Excellent Promotional Tool Blogs as an online promotional strategy if done right could save you huge dollars in reaching out to people. This is also a medium where you need have absolutely no dependence whatsoever on any professional help and you can do everything yourself. Start Blogging Now: 10 Reasons Why You Really Need a Blog for Your Business 1. It is perfect for creating a web presence for independent professionals who have something to say and who need people to get to know them and what they can do for them. Blogs and Journalism The world has seen the emergence of a new style of journalism, based on a 'raw feed' directly from the source. And the common notion that surrounds the emergence of serving 'raw feed' is that the journalists testing the new waters are bound to wreak havoc on institutionalized media. 24 Tips and Strategies on How Everyone Can Blog Right and Get Everybody to Read By the end of 2004 blogs had established themselves as a keypart of online culture. "Blog readership shoots up 58% in2004 6 million Americans get news and information fed tothem through RSS aggregators But 62% of online Americans donot know what a blog is. Blogs and Networking In the middle 1990's everyone started talking about needing a website. Now, the new "must have" is a web log or blog. Sales Marketing: Secrets To Using Blogs (Online Diaries) To Increase Your sales And Profits These days, everybody is blogging.How about you?You can incorporate blogging into your sales marketingand achieve more success. To Blog Or Not To Blog - A Laymans View We have now entered the world of blogs! Sounds kind of Harry Potterish, doesn't it?If you're over 20 years old, you probably think this is some crazy sci-fi phenomenon, or I've simply lost my mind. Don't fret, the vast majority of people don't know what a blog is all about and more importantly, why it matters to them. Small / Medium Business Blog Process Outsourcing as a Website Traffic Building Service You are a small or a medium business owner. You have a well designed business website. Find Out How Microsofts Plans Could Make Your Subscribers Beg You for RSS Content! Microsoft recently announced that they will be releasing a new browser version sometime this summer. The new browser version was to be released with Longhorn, the code name for their next operating system to replace Windows XP, but they decided that they needed to release it sooner than that. Top 7 Reasons Why Your Business Should Use RSS In today's online world of high-speed websites and giant portals, every established Internet business boasts of delivering content via RSS.RSS (Really Simple Syndication or Rich Site Summary), a simple XML based technology allows anyone to easily share content on the web. Is Blogging For You? Take This Quick Quiz What The Hell Is A Blog Anyway?The word 'blog' is a shortened version of 'web blog'. A 'web log' just means a log or diary-type entry on the web. 5 New Internet Marketing Opportunities Through RSS When it comes to new internet marketing opportunities for your business, RSS just might be the answer you were looking for. Here are just some of the new opportunities it can provide you with ?1. Blogs: Todays Internet Diary and Marketing Tool The popular blogger.com owned by Google, Inc. Writing Quality Blogs Writing?Blogs?Blogs are on-line journals where people express themselves through writing. Writing?Writing is the process where one puts down words of a language on a format that others can read. Blog Construction Blogs like all forms of writing are an art form that takes knowledge and practice to do well.Writing?Blogs?Blogs are on-line journals where people express themselves through writing. So You Have a Blog, Now What Do You Do With It? Blog Basics (This article assumes that you have already set up a blog on your website. I highly recommend using sBlog: http://servous. |
| home | site map |
| © 2006 |