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About Feeds

Many websites have links labeled "XML" or "RSS" or "Atom". All of these are ways of saying that you can find out about updates to that site without having to browse to it yourself to check.

This feature is referred to as Syndication or Aggregation, or sometimes it's just called Subscribing. On some sites, instead of a link, they'll have an orange button that says RSS or XML, and looks a lot like this: . That's a sign that the page you're viewing has a feed available.

You can add our feed to your Google, Yahoo and MSN accounts via the following image links: Add to Google, , Add to My AOL.  To add our news feed to a host of other websites (Feed Demon, New News Wire, News Fire, News Gator, RSS Owl, Shrook, and USM) you can check our news feed via .

Recently, web browser Mozilla Firefox allows users to add news feeds to their Google Account via the following icon .

Getting Started

Who Publishes Feeds?

Anyone that publishes on the web can publish a feed. Blogs (or weblogs) were one of the first types of sites to offer feeds but major newspapers and news websites, hobbyist sites, and even retailers like Amazon.com all offer feeds, too.

What Do I Need?

Just like when you want to watch a video clip or listen to music on the web, you need a "player" of some kind to subscribe to feeds. The good news is, there are number of these tools available, and many of them are either totally free or free to try out.

The "player" for a feed is called a feed reader. (Or sometimes it's called a news reader or RSS reader or RSS client. All these terms mean the same thing.) This tool lets you subscribe to any feeds you want, checks automatically to see when they're updated, and then displays the updates for you as they arrive.

Feed readers come in two varieties: web-based, or as an installable program. If you use one of the web-based readers, you can access your feeds from anywhere you go, just by signing into the website that manages your feeds. If you use a feed reading program that installs on your computer, your feeds can be stored for you even if you're not connected to the Internet.

What Feed Reader Should I Use?

We don't have an official preference, but we can list some of the most popular tools our customers have told us they like.

For web-based feed readers, many people choose Bloglines or NewsGator Online, both of which are free services designed specifically for reading feeds. My Yahoo! allows you to subscribe to feeds and have them display within your custom page as well.

If you prefer a feed reading program that you can install on your computer, you can use FeedDemon or NewsGator for Microsoft Outlook if you're on Microsoft Windows. Both tools are made by the same company as NewsGator online, so you can switch between these programs and the web-based reader at any time. If you're on a Macintosh running OS X, the most popular feed reader is NetNewsWire, which can also connect to the web-based services.

Mac users can also use the built-in support for feeds in the Safari web browser in OS X 10.4, and Microsoft Windows users will have support for feeds in the upcoming version 7 of Internet Explorer. Anyone using the Mozilla Firefox web browser has support for feeds built-in, as well.

Subscribing to Feeds

Once you've got a tool to read feeds, you'll want to find some feeds worth reading. Many of the tools listed above provide some built-in feeds to get you started. Then, as you visit other sites on the web, you can keep your eyes open for links that say XML or RSS or Syndication, or for that orange button up above, and add the feeds you find interesting.

Technical Details

What Is an XML Feed?

Despite the geeky technical names, feeds are very simple. They're just small files, much like a web page. Feeds have a special format that lets you collect information from a wide variety of sites and display the updates all in one place, as they happen.

Most feeds are offered for free, to encourage you to read the site that publishes them, or so you'll click on the links in the feed. Almost any information that's updated regularly is a good candidate for being offered as a feed.

RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication" and Atom is just a name, not an acronym.

What's the Difference Between the Various Formats?

For a regular person reading feeds, the various versions of RSS and Atom should offer similar experiences. At a technical level, RSS is focused on making simple syndication very easy, and is the older and more widely-published format. Atom is a web standard from the IETF, one of the standards bodies that's helped define the web, and is more focused on enabling both reading and writing of content with a single format. At Six Apart, all of our tools support both formats equally.

What is Podcasting?

Podcasting is the popular name for using special types of feeds to distribute media files like songs, audio files, or even video. Feed readers that support podcasting will automatically download the media files in a podcast feed and then copy them to a portable device or to your computer for you to listen to whenever you want.

Many people listen to podcast audio files on an Apple iPod, which inspired the name. But podcasting can be any kind of file on any kind of device, delivered by subscribing to a feed.

   
 
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