What is RSS?
RSS stands for 'Really Simple Syndication'. It is new technique for
having pages from websites appear automatically on your desktop.
Unlike a web page, which you have to go visit, the news comes to
you. Like email? Well, yes although the big difference is that you
decide which websites you want to receive information from. In that
respect it's permission-based which can offer a good antidote to
spam email.
Websites that support RSS usually show the RSS icon
In order to get an RSS feed from a website that
displays this icon, you will need what's called an 'RSS
Reader'.
What's an RSS Reader?
An RSS reader is what you need to get RSS feeds. There are lots of
free ones out there (see links below). In addition, the big names
are starting to provide them. For example, Apple's new Tiger
operating system has integrated RSS support and Microsoft's next
version of Windows (codenamed Longhorn) is going to have it
too.
Windows
Awasu www.awasu.com
Newz Crawler www.newzcrawler.com
FeedDemon www.feeddemon.com
MAC OSX
NetNewsWire ranchero.com/netnewswire
Newsfire www.newsfirerss.com
Web
Bloglines www.bloglines.com
NewsGator www.newsgator.com
How do I get started?
Pick an RSS reader. Then go to a site you want to follow (which
supports RSS) and click on the orange RSS icon (shown above).
You'll then see a load of code (called XML). Don't be put off -
this is normal! Depending on the RSS reader you have, there are
various ways to add the feed, such as by dragging the URL of the
RSS feed into your reader, or copying and pasting it. For more
details, follow the instructions on the reader's website.