National & InternationalTop StoriesNPR Topics: World NPR Topics: Nation Art & Culture NPR Topics: Business Metro & StateJohn ArchibaldLocal Government With Kyle Whitmire Conservation: The Behavior Gap Magic City Marketplace The Price of Poverty Price of Poverty: Time Banks Price of Poverty: Involuntary Flextime Price of Poverty: Buy-a-Meter Birmingham-Southern's Struggles: a Student Perspective Price of Poverty: Food Deserts Remembering Cecil Whitmire Occupational Tax Settlement Child Care Subsidies at Risk Robert Bentley Vestavia Hills: Library in the Forest Hotel Tax Dispute Oil Spill and Hair Sausages Anne Frank and Me Jefferson County Commission Runoff On the Line: Ask the Mayor Midwives in Alabama The Future of the Jefferson County Commission New EPA Sulfur Dioxide Rules Alabama Gubernatorial Primary 2010 Alabama and the Oil Spill: Seafood Safety Alabama and the Oil Spill: One Family's Story Bike to Work The ASO plays Carnegie Hall Alabama and the Oil Spill: Hurricane Season News Features Archive |
What is RSS?An RSS file is basically a list of headlines encoded so that it can be easily used by another program or website. RSS is usually said to stand for "Really Simple Syndication" and it is relatively easy to implement and use. RSS is a form of XML (eXtensible Markup Language), which means that each piece of data in the list a headline, a description of a story is coded separately so that a program will know exactly what to do with it Programs that know what to do with RSS files are called "news aggregators." They let you read headlines from dozens or hundreds of news sites at one time. You simply plug in the addresses of the RSS files you want, such as "http://wbhm.org/News/Feed.rdf". News aggregators have been proliferating lately. Some popular ones are Amphetadesk (for Windows, Linux, or Mac), Radio (for Windows or Mac), NetNewsWire (for Mac), KlipFolio, NewzCrawler (for Windows), and FeedReader (a bare-bones Estonian PC version). Four aggregators that require a bit more technical knowledge are Syndirella, Aggie, NewsGator, and SharpReader (all require Microsoft's .NET to be installed on your PC). A Java installation is required for nntp//rss, a program which lets you read RSS files in Outlook Express or any other newsgroup-reading software. Or if you'd like your RSS headlines in a news ticker, try wTicker (for Windows). Once you have one of these aggregators installed, you'll need to know the location of WBHM's News Feed (http://wbhm.org/News/Feed.rdf). |
