Surfnetkids Newsletter Now Available in RSSReprinted from Surfnetkids NewsletterAugust 15, 2003
![]() Dear Reader, What are the two biggest problems facing email users today? Ironically they are:#1) spam #2) spam filters Unsolicited email is flooding our in-boxes. Unfortunately while trying to fix the problem, spam filters are blocking mail we want to receive, even, perhaps (gasp!) our free weekly Surfnetkids newsletter. It's a classic case of throwing the baby out with the bath water. -------------------------------------------- Surfnetkids Newsletter in RSS format -------------------------------------------- So what's an email user or publisher to do? Rescue the baby, of course! To this end, many (including Surfnetkids) are turning to a new delivery system: RSS. The Surfnetkids newsletter is now available in three formats: HTML email, text email or RSS. For those already familiar with RSS (which stands for a number of different things depending on who you ask) I'll cut to the chase, and give you the URL: http://www.surfnetkids.com/newsletter-rss.xml Please note that this is a full-content feed, not just a list of headlines and links. If weekly topic headlines are more to your liking, try this instead: http://www.surfnetkids.com/surfnetkids-rss.xml ------------------------------------- What is RSS? ------------------------------------ For those needing more information, here goes. RSS is a document format that requires a
special reader, because as of today (and this will change) neither your existing browser nor your
email client can read RSS. Once you install an RSS news reader, it will poll your RSS
subscriptions (such as the Surfnetkids newsletter at http://www.surfnetkids.com/newsletter-rss.xml) and automatically deliver new issues to your desktop.
To get started, you need to download and install an RSS reader, and then subscribe to the "Surfing the Net with Kids" RSS newsletter by adding the URL http://www.surfnetkids.com/newsletter-rss.xml to your channel or subscription list. Here is a short list of RSS readers, also known as news aggregators. Bloglines (browser-based, free )http://www.bloglines.com Bloglines is free, and works in a browser, so it is inherently cross-platform (meaning it doesn't care if you use Windows or Mac.) I had two problems with it, both of which I overcame. First it wouldn't accept my validation email (but their customer support people handled this quite quickly) and secondly, it takes about an hour for new RSS feeds to be indexed by their system. So if you are the first person to sign up for a particular feed through Bloglines, you will notice a delay in your first delivery. My Yahoo.com (browser-based, free) http://my.yahoo.com To view RSS feeds on your custom My Yahoo page, click "Choose Content," then select "RSS Headlines" (which you'll find under the heading "Web & Internet.") Requires free registration. Pluck (Windows only, browser-based, free) http://www.pluck.com Pluck is is another browser-based solution, but it requires Windows 2000 or XP, Internet Explorer 6, and a free software download. NewsGator (Windows, $29, free trial) http://www.newsgator.com NewsGator integrates into MS Outlook, and your subscriptions look very much like email messages I do not use Outlook for my email, but NewsGator is so slick, that I use it for my RSS subscriptions. NewzCrawler (Windows, $24.95, free trial) http://www.newzcrawler.com/ NewzCrawler is a standalone Windows program. I tried the free trial, there wasn’t anything wrong with it, but I liked the NewsGator interface better. FeedDemon (Windows, $29.95, free trial) http://www.feeddemon.com/feeddemon/ I enjoyed testing it out, but ended up using NewsGator. Rocket RSS (browser-based, free, no download) http://reader.rocketinfo.com/desktop/
Mozilla Firefox 1.0 (Windows, free download) http://www.mozilla.org/products/firefox/ An open-source alternative to Windows Internet Explorer, with a feed reader built in. My Mac friends tell me both of the following are well thought of: MacReporter (Mac OS X, $15, free trial)http://www.inferiis.com/products/macreporter/ NetNewsWire (Mac OS X, $39.95, free trial) http://ranchero.com/netnewswire/ For a longer list of RSS readers (including more free options) try About Email at http://email.about.com/cs/rssfeedreaders/ .
Finding Other RSS Subscriptions ---------------------------------------- Once you've installed an RSS reader, you are going to want to take it out for a spin. So here is a selection of other RSS feeds you may enjoy, including four other feeds that I publish. For a more complete listing, visit Syndi8.com ( http://www.syndic8.com ). “This is True” by Randy Cassinghamhttp://thisistrue.com/freetrue.rss “Truth is stranger than fiction, because fiction has to make sense.” “Lockergnome Windows Daily” by Chris Pirillo http://www.lockergnome.com/rss/windowsdaily.php New York Times Front Page http://partners.userland.com/nytRss/nytHomepage.xml Ask Yahoo! http://ask.yahoo.com/ask/index.xml Dictionary.com: Word of the Day http://dictionary.reference.com/wordoftheday/wotd.rss Quotes of the Day http://www.quotationspage.com/data/qotd.rss And last, and hopefully not least, here are the other Surfnetkids feeds I publish: Barbara Feldman: Welcome to My Office http://www.barbarafeldman.com/index.rdf A compendium of resources and recommendations for those interested in online publishing. Surfnetkids Journal http://blog.surfnetkids.com/index.rdf An informal and personal collection of comments that didn’t fit anywhere else on Surfnetkids.com. How to Add Games to Your Site http://blog.how2add.com/index.rdf Random thoughts about creating online games and updates to my e-book "How to Add Games to Your Site." Surfing the Net with Kids Headlines http://surfnetkids.com/surfnetkids-rss.xml Weekly headlines from my syndicated column, with links back to the Surfnetkids.com site. See ya on the Net, Barbara J. Feldman"Surfing the Net with Kids" P.S. What do you think? Had you heard of RSS before? Was this confusing or enlightening? Let me know by posting your comments here. |