brother wrote:Please do tell us
Alrighty than...
I'm sure most of you have some set of sites that you check for updates daily. News sites like BBC and CNN, technology with Slashdot maybe, blogs of some friends, online comics, forums such as this one - whatever.
Everyone I know has some list of sites that they visit daily.
If you aren't using RSS than your list of sites is few times smaller than it could have been. Or you are spending much more time checking these sites than you could have spent using RSS.
Example: before I myself started to use RSS I visited about 15 sites daily. There were few other sites that I visited pretty often, like once a week. But that was only when I had time to do so or remembered that I haven't been there for some time. When I started to use RSS, the amount of sites constantly grew and now I am monitoring more than 200 sites for updates. I spend roughly the same time as before to do so though.
Here's how it works. Many sites these days provide an RSS feed (at least most of the major ones do). You can sometimes see it as a link to 'RSS feed', 'Atom feed', 'Syndication', 'XML', or icons like these:
,
, or
. You can click on these links and read them with your browser, but that's not much fun.
Instead you should use a special program -
RSS aggregator. There are a number of these programs both free and commercial for any operating system out there. You can search the web for "RSS aggregator" or visit
this page, which lists a few. Or you can use an online aggregator, like
Bloglines. I'm using it myself for all my feeds.
What does an aggregator do? Well, it monitors sites for updates. You "subscribe" to an RSS feed with it. This is just a complicated way of saying it. Aggregator will have an interface similar to your bookmarks in the browser - folders and links. But instead of just any links, you'll be giving links to RSS feeds. RSS aggregator will periodically (say hourly) automatically get content from RSS links that you gave it, and check if there are any updates. If there are any, it will notify you. No longer you have to jump around one million websites checking if any of them posted any news.
RSS feeds can be configured differently by site owners. Some provide only the headlines and links to full articles. Others provide headlines and a small excerpt of the article. Yet others provide full headlines and articles. This means that you can read some sites without even visiting them.
One picture is a thousand words they say, so here is a screenshot of my regular Bloglines interface. I'll give you a minute to look at it, and than explain what you see.
On the left panel I have a list of folders with subscriptions to different sites. Bold font is used on folders that have new items. For example, you can see that Programming folder (slightly cut) has 412 new items and RSS folder has 105 new items. When I open the folder, I see the list of my subscriptions. Again bold is used on the sites that have new items. For example, you can see that I've opened the Technology folder and now reading the updates from the site of Miguel de Icaza, while I have two more sites with updates - Slashdot, with 21 new items and Yandex Blog (in Russian) with 1 new item.
On the right I have the actual items. As I've already mentioned these can be just the headlines, headlines with excerpts, or complete items, even with pictures (as you can see from the one on the screenshot).
I guess now it should be much more obvious what an RSS aggregator is and what it does shouldn't it?
Why am I using Bloglines? The beauty of Bloglines is that:
1. I don't have to install anything on my computer to use it (I already have a web browser and its all I need).
2. I can read my news from any computer connected to the Internet. When I read items, they will be marked read, when I subscribe to new ones, they will automatically appear. Thus I don't have to synchronize anything, say, between my home and office workstations.
3. Bloglines service is free of charge.
4. Bloglines has some other useful features that I haven't talked about yet.
So, what other useful features does Bloglines have that I haven't talked about yet? Well, because this is a free online service, a lot of people are using it. Thus Bloglines can do some analysis and information sharing. For example, you can mark your subscriptions as either 'Private' or 'Public'. Other people can see the list of sites you are subscribed to (only those that you've marked 'Public').
Go back to that screenshot o'mine. Look at the top of the right panel.
Do you see it where it says '1,180 subscribers'? This means that the site I am currently reading is read by 1,180 other Bloglines users. If I click on that link, I will get a list of people who read this site, and who marked it as 'Public'. This way I can also browse through other subscriptions of these people. I am interested in this, because chances are, if they read the same sites as I do, we have a similar mindset and interests. Maybe they are subscribed to some other site which I might be interested in, but which I've missed so far.
There is another link up there, called 'Related feeds'. This one will basically do the step I described above, but in a slightly different way. If I click on that link, Blogines will go through the list of people who read this site, make a list of all other sites that these people read, sort it by popularity and present it to me. Cool, eh?
And that's not it yet. Look again at the screenshot, but this time focus your eyes on the left bottom corner. There is a link called 'Recommendations'. There Bloglines gives me a list of sites that I might be interested in based on my current list of subscriptions.
I can also export the list of my subscriptions. This is helpful if I want, say, include the list of sites I read on my website. This is usually called 'Blogroll' or 'My links'.
Click here to see this used on my site. See, I don't have to maintain a separate list of links for my site. Every time I add a new subscription to my Bloglines profile, it automatically appears on my site too. Same goes for deletion. (Reminder: not all links appear, but only those that I've marked as Public). The same way I can choose to export only one specific folder, or a list of folders - not the whole list.
And of course, I can search through a huge list of RSS feeds with keywords, add my new feeds, set options for my feeds, and do a whole lotta more.
By now you might be wondering
how does Cyprus Forum fit the picture. Well, phpBB, the software on which Cyprus Forum runs, has a plugin that allows it to generate RSS feeds. You can subscribed either to all forums, or some specific ones, like 'General Chat' or 'Cyprus Tourism'. Your RSS aggregator will check the subscribed forums for new messages and notify you every time there is one. No longer you have to hit that Refresh button waiting for someone to post something. You might say that you already get notifications on email now. Well, not exactly. At this time, you get email notifications only when someone replies to the topic that you've posted in. But you don't know when someone creates a new topic. With RSS you'd be informed.
Since this post is getting way too long, I'll stop here. Let me know if you have any questions and I'll try to answer them to my best.
In the meanwhile, don't be afraid - go the
http://www.bloglines.com and register for an account. Try to use it. It is really simple and useful. And since it's free, you don't loose anything except for few minutes of your time. (That can caught upon easily with RSS later on). If you won't like, you can always leave it behind.