Is RSS Here to Stay or Gone Tomorrow?
by Kent Thompson
Published on this site: April 12th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

RSS is hot. We have seen it everywhere, from John-Doe blogsites
to major news websites. If you haven't heard of RSS before,
that's okay, because I hadn't either until a couple of months
ago!
RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication, or whatever you want
it to stand for. I have seen it also stand for RDF Site Summary,
but it really doesn't matter. What's important is what it does.
Here's how RSS works:
Every site that has constantly changing content has one big problem:
How do you notify your visitors when you've posted new content without
them having to scour your entire site every 30 mins? You could send
them an email, but that has several drawbacks.
First, you might not get your messages through the spam filters.
Filters are snatching more and more messages, and just to keep up
anymore you have to run all your content through rating systems
just to find the likelyhood of it getting blocked. What a pain in
the neck!
Second, people are so hesitant to give out their closely guarded
email address. I know I guard my email address with my life. How
can your visitors trust you if they just clicked to your site? You
could be an underground spam operation for all they care.
This is where RSS is awesome!
Instead of sending an email, you can have your website generate
what's called an RSS Feed. An RSS Feed is nothing more than a webpage
with a bunch of summaries of the new content on it. Next time you
see that little orange icon with XML or RSS, click on it and you'll
see what I mean. The summaries are formatted in such a way that
an RSS Reader can sort them out and display them neatly.
There are tons of free RSS Readers now, so if you don't have
one, do a simple Google search for RSS Reader and you should
have no trouble finding one.
All the visitor has to do is copy the little orange RSS icon link
and paste it into their RSS Reader program. The RSS program will
periodically download the RSS webpage and will display the new headlines
much like your email program will display your subject lines. If
you like one of the headlines, you can click on it and it will display
a short description and a link to the entire article. If you want
to read more, click the link and it will display the actual full
article on the website.
Here's why this is killer:
You can now be notified of the new content or headlines posted
to all your favorite websites without having to do very much work!
Imagine putting twenty RSS Feeds into your reader and having it
download all the content in a matter of seconds instead of having
to surf to each site individually!
If you ask me, RSS is here to stay. All the major sites support
it like CNN, ESPN, Yahoo and Google, so that surely is a good sign!
So go on and fire up Google and get yourself an RSS Reader. You
will be glad you did...I sure was.

Kent Thompson makes this way too easy with his new software.
Check it out now at http://feedmagic.com/fm/?&req=k&tc=4df1c3

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