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October 10th, 2006

Another (simpler) way to view RSS

Without really knowing it, I’ve actually been using RSS feeds for the last 3 years.

Of course, there is a lot more fanfare now (particularly with ie7), and every man and his dog are rushing to provide RSS support, and make is easy to subscribe to RSS feeds.

I must admit I’ve tried using the RSS features built in to a few browsers, but it never feels right.

It always feels like browser-based RSS ’viewers’ are forcing me to view RSS feeds like a large collection of web pages… and it just doesn’t work for me.

Since I learnt about the internet during the early 1990’s (before browsers), I’ve just gotten used to the idea of using different applications for each type internet ‘media’.

As an example: I use a web browser to view web pages, an email program to read emails, and a usenet reader to read usenet… So I also use an RSS reader to view my RSS feeds (It feels, to me, that there is an odd resemblance between usenet and RSS… but I can’t quite put my finger on it).

There have been a few apps (eg netscape) which tried to integrate email and browsing, but nobody seems interested (probably because a program that does on one job and does it well, is better than a jack-of-all-trades program).

So, about 3 years ago, I stumbled over a nifty program called desktop sidebar. It was nice, in that it stayed hidden on the left on my screen, yet it had many useful plugins that I could use without having to run 6 different applications. Apparently you can get a similar tool from google (the google sidebar, which is part of the Google Desktop).

There is a good comparison between the two, at: Hmm.

Here is what my sidebar looks like:

Desktop Sidebar screenshot 

Although I have added a clock, an internet slideshow (which is automatically refreshed when new images are available… you could call it an image RSS feed), winamp controls… I also have a ‘newsroom’… which is just a different name for RSS feeds.

And although adding new feeds is not totally smooth and polished, reading the feeds is just effortless!

I don’t care if adding new feeds is a little awkward, since I only do it every few months, but I read RSS feeds every day, so it needs to work with a minimum of hassle.

Its really nice to be able to just browse the RSS titles, and as soon as I see one I like, I can either hover my mouse over it (to get a popup of the full article, or I can click on it, and have a new browser window open up with the article in it.

If I decide to change browsers, I won’t have to learn any new RSS tool that is built into the browser… Desktop Sidebar and google sidebar work with any browser.

So what are you waiting for? give it a go!

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Posted by Computer Help in Hints, Technical

3 Comments »

3 Responses to “Another (simpler) way to view RSS”

  1. Hux says:

    I have my homepage set as Google Customized, this seeing I also use Gmail. Within that page I have a few feeds from diffrent tech websites etc like Cnet.com.au, ZdNet etc.

    I to tried RSS programs, Firefox, other readers, and it just wasnt practical. Google homepage shows my feeds, very simpley, and its there if I want it, no hunting for programs, or anything else.

    Simple, yet elegant. Like the sidebar.

  2. Santiago says:

    Problem with RSS Feed in WordPress.
    I have a subdomain that I installed wordpress for another blog site, but the subdomain site's rss feed points to my parent site.
    Can anyone come up with any suggestions?

  3. Computer Help says:

    I had a similar problem with my forum (smf).

    Turns out I installed it using “computeraid.net.au” but then decided to alter my other domains using a 301 redirection, to “point” to computer-aid.com.au

    The forum started acting strangely, until I realised that it couldn’t find the .net domain, as it kept getting redirected to the .com domain.

    After some searching, I found that all I had to do was change a setting in the index.php to point it to the right place.

    You might have a similar problem.

    Otherwise a reinstall of wordpress might be the way to go.

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