How to Keep Up with Everything: RSS
Problem: I want to keep up with what they are saying at a hundred different websites: New York Times, craigslist ads for Dogs for Sale, UM SSW blog, etc. But I can't keep checking all these sites every hour. What can I do?
Solution: RSS.
Many websites now let you "subscribe" to their RSS "feeds." (This is all free, by the way.) A feed keeps feeding the stuff to you, as soon as it is posted. So, for example, you can have a
Facebook feed
that lets you know when something has happened on Facebook, without actually having to go to the Facebook webpage.
In other words, you can get up-to-the-minute articles from a hundred webpages, all delivered to one RSS feed webpage.
You read your feeds in an RSS reader. I use
Google Reader
. So instead of having to keep all those websites open, I just keep that one Google Reader webpage open. It shows me what's happening in the feeds that I have subscribed to. If I want to see the details, with two clicks I can open the full webpage where the item was posted. But even if time is short, at least I can scan the headlines and, if I wish, the summaries.
To add another subscription, just add another RSS feed. To find RSS feeds, search webpages or websites for "RSS" or for "feeds." Example: at the bottom center of the
New York Times
homepage, you'll see a little orange RSS button. Click on that, and you're taken to a page that lists
dozens of distinct NY Times feeds
. For instance, they have an Opinions feed (or, if you like, you can subscribe to individual columnists), as well as feeds for Health, International, etc.
Examples of a few other feeds and feed webpages:
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