Tag-Archive for » rss-tutorials «

Wednesday, September 02nd, 2009 | Author: barry0912

While the in-browser feed readers are convenient they are still quite rudimentary. You should consider switching to a full-fledged feed aggregator for more features and increased usability. There are many feed readers to choose from, each have different levels of complexity and features. There are essentially two types: web-based and application-based. With a web-based aggregator you can check your feeds from any computer but this comes at the cost of limited functionality and speed. With application-based feed readers you get excellent features and speed but lack mobility. You dont have to decide just yet, Ill go over configuring both types.

First off, well start with a web-based feed reader. The most best and popular online feed reader, in my opinion, is Bloglines. Sign up for an account and click My Feeds on the top left. Test out Bloglines by adding a few feeds. When you setup Bloglines for the first time, it will suggest a few feeds to subscribe to. I usually do not accept them and just add my own. Below My Feeds should be a Add link that you will click.

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You will be on a subscribe page now. If you found the feed on the website you can paste that in here. However, Bloglines has a feature where you can just type in the URL of the website and it will search for feeds. It may find several feeds and other times it will not find any.

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To avoid confusion about which feed to use, I suggest using the one shown on the website as that is the one they want you to use. Sometimes they will place a link to their FeedBurner feed and forget to remove the old feed. Either way, whether you enter a feed or URL, click Subscribe and use the default options. Do this several times with some more feeds and you will have setup Bloglines. Everytime you login you can click My Feeds and instantly find out how many of your feeds have new posts you have not read yet. Unread feeds will be bolded and have the number of new stories in parentheses. Bloglines provides a simple way to read RSS feeds from anywhere, but is not the fastest and most feature-rich solution.

Sunday, August 16th, 2009 | Author: barry0912

RSS feeds seem to be the breakout knowledge for the time. With additional users turning to them for driving traffic to their web site, its no wonder that a trail of RSS feed spam is following in the wake. A alert editing of your RSS feed possibly will make the difference between being classified as sincere content or RSS spam.

RSS search engines are just beginning to pick up steam. As new RSS feeds become searchable, the quantity of visitors will multiply and spam is surely to follow. It is an adverse side effect of free interaction. While RSS users can typically unsubscribe to feeds they deem as spam, browsing with keywords clothed in an RSS search engine is where the hindrance arises.

RSS spam largely consists of three main types generally often found in the RSS search engines. The initial type is keyword stuffing.

Keyword stuffing involves filling every RSS feed article with high-value keywords for a detailed topic. The articles are not intended for human visitors, but as an alternative for search engine robots to point traffic to a target web place. This RSS spam method is nothing more than an adaptation of the conventional keyword-stuffed web page, often banned by main search engines.

The next type involves RSS feed link farms. These RSS articles often contain very insignificant content, if any, other than a plain keyword. Their most important attraction is the feed title. Clicking the feed title takes the user to a blog containing tens or hundreds of other blogs and RSS feeds, every one directing to additional links inside the farm. The goal of this type of RSS spam is to trick the user into clicking advertisements or else directing them to a product web site.

The third type is the innovation of fake RSS feeds. These appear like legitimate, but often duplicated, article content. Whether they provide quantity or not is certainly debatable. These feeds are generally shaped in bulk, using automated scripts, and appear like in nature to the link farms. By attracting the users to seemingly valuable content, they wish to add advertisement clicks or product web site traffic.

Your RSS feed might happen to fall into one of these three categories. While you might at present be experiencing increased traffic from the RSS search engines, these directories are working on filtering out the RSS spam techniques. However, you can still take benefit of RSS feeds and their power by following an RSS-friendly guideline.

Refrain from using automated scripts to create online content used by your RSS feeds. As a substitute, compose your own original opinion, product descriptions, and reviews. It takes a little additional time, but the search engines will appreciate this content much more highly, your visitors will recognize the value of the unique content, and the subscription count to your RSS feed will grow. It is also crucial to keep your feed updated with changing content as opposed to using a static feed, which remains the same. Search engines respect dynamic feeds and will likely rank you higher as a consequence.

At hand are tools and services existing, which aid in keeping an RSS feed updated with your changing content. Such services include FeedFire for converting your web site content to a periodically updated RSS feed or software such as FeedForAll for creating and editing RSS feeds.

A thriving RSS feed is very much the same as a doing well web page. It may perhaps take a little more time to digitize your judgment, but the end conclusion is well worth the effort. By avoiding the tricks in RSS feed spam, you can help make the difference in quality of feeds and enjoyment in your readers.

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