i’ve been doing a lot of research for work on RSS feeds and aggragators as we’re finally getting around to putting feeds on our corporate website (where it’s desperately been needed for some time.) luckily, i’m the one that came up with the idea (hoorah!) which means that i can spend some of my “spare” time here reading blogs.. as it’s for research, eh-hem. at work, i’m primarily on my windows machine (win2k, blech) and my OSX machine just sits idly by waiting for use, poor thing. this means that i really had to do some looking around for the perfect RSS aggragator for windows.
on OSX, i love newsfire because i’m a firefox user (that and it’s got this really cute flaming logo and who doesn’t love flaming logos? hhmmm, i sound like a bad web client from the early nineties. “can you make my logo spin and have flames shooting out of it?”) the two work seamlessly together. for windows, the task of finding an RSS reader that works with firefox is.. well, let’s just say that at least half the hair on my head is left.
i spent most of the day yesterday trying to figure out why feedreader would only let me browse to sites off the feeds with IE. really, all you people still using IE should be ashamed of yourself! don’t you know that you’re opening yourself up to a million security problems using that damn thing? i only use it when i’m forced to and that’s only when i have to interface with my company’s content management system, teamsite. after finding out that feedreader would only let me use IE, i continued my search with little luck. all these desktop aggragators have built in browsers which isn’t what i’m looking for. i want firefox integration! i want alerts upon feed updates! i want it all! is that too much to ask?
apparantly it is for desktop applications but not for web-based ones. i came across two new-to-me RSS applications and i want to tell you about them if you don’t already know. then i’m also going to lecture you about your RSS feeds on your sites.. here goes.
google rss reader. you probably haven’t heard of it as it’s still in beta but i don’t expect it to stay that way for long. it’s extremely bare-bones so it doesn’t have any helpful features as of yet. it won’t allow you to mark all your feeds as read and it also doesn’t support alerts yet. but, it does offer OPML (an XML file list of all your feeds that can be exported and/or imported from all major utilities) support, some integration with gmail, and a very cool interface. i see a lot of potential here if they can get a few of the bugs worked out. it’ll be one to watch.
bloglines. i’ve heard about bloglines a million times from my fellow knit bloggers. you’ve no doubt seen the “subscribe with bloglines” button or link on bloggers’ sites and wondered what it is. unfortunately, the name “bloglines” is a bit constricting because it’s not just for blogs. it’s a full-powered, web-based RSS aggragator and it has everything that i was looking for: OPML support; view all the RSS feeds within firefox and continue to browse to sites off the feeds with firefox; alerts, desktop AND browser-based; integration with many different blog utilities including a handy utility where you can put in the main URL of someone’s blog (this really only works with blogger and few other blog hosts) and it finds the RSS feed for you. i think that i’m in love.
after finding bloglines and importing in my OPML bookmarks from feedreader (which i gladly closed and told never to open again) i proceeded to all of my favorite blogs via my old-fashioned bookmarks to find their feeds and add them to my bloglines list. some blogs already had the “subscribe with bloglines” link/button and that made it very easy. a few others had links to their RSS feeds and many had nothing. this especially applies to several of my knit blogger friends who use typepad or blogger. believe it or not girlfriends, typepad and blogger create RSS feeds for you! all you have to do is put the link in your sidebar. don’t know what that link is? you can find it by viewing the source on your website.
look for this:
<link rel=”alternate” type=”application/atom+xml” title=”Atom” href=”http://yourblogname.typepad.com/yourblogname/atom.xml” />
<link rel=”alternate” type=”application/rss+xml” title=”RSS 1.0″ href=”http://yourblogname.typepad.com/yourblogname/index.rdf” />
<link rel=”alternate” type=”application/rss+xml” title=”RSS 2.0″ href=”http://yourblogname.typepad.com/yourblogname/rss.xml” />
these tags tell the browser that you have alternate feeds of your website available. in this example, there are three feeds available:
an atom feed -
http://yourblogname.typepad.com/yourblogname/atom.xml
an RSS1.0 feed (generally an excerpt feed) -
http://yourblogname.typepad.com/yourblogname/index.rdf
an RSS2.0 feed (generally a full text feed) -
http://yourblogname.typepad.com/yourblogname/rss.xml
choose one or choose them all! put the links in your sidebar so that people can subscribe to you! if i put you in my bloglines, it alerts me that you have new posts and then i hasten over to your site to see what new and wonderful things you have to offer. this is what’s known as RSS-enhanced click-through rates. it drives traffic to your site and it makes people happy. capiche?
ok, i’ve lectured you and i must now heed my own words of advice. i’ve gone and made it easy for everyone to get their gleekiness in a timely fashion. you’ll see that my sidebar now contains a “subscribe with bloglines” link right under the other RSS feeds. now, shoo! and go do it to your site, too.
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