Wednesday, October 6, 2010
FeedMyInbox
FeedMyInbox is a new service that turns virtually any Web site or RSS feed into a nicely formatted e-mail newsletter - one that arrives every day
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Times: an RSS reader for iPad that looks like a newspaper
"If you really liked the idea of Flipboard, a social news aggregator for the iPad, but prefer to define your own sources of news and information instead of leaving it up to your friends on Twitter and Facebook, Times, is an iPad app worth checking out. Times is a feed reader that reformats news stories to look and behave like a newspaper on your iPad screen, complete with categories across the top of the page, popular news stories highlighted with larger images and more prominent placement on the display, and the ability to save and share news stories with your friends. Perhaps most importantly, Times allows you to provide your own news sources and customize what news you get, instead of trusting your social networks to feed the news to you."
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Google Reader Play
Google has announced an experimental product from the Google Reader team that makes the best stuff in Reader more accessible for everyone, while giving Reader users a new way to view their feeds. It's called Google Reader Play, and it's a new way to browse interesting stuff on the web that's easy to use and personalized to the things you like. Best of all, there's no set-up required
Saturday, February 27, 2010
RSS Education Center
NotePage, Inc., creators of the popular "FeedForAll" RSS feed editor and the RSS2HTML script, have launched a new RSS Education Center. The RSS learning center is designed to assist new RSS users, as well as experienced users, in adopting the RSS technology in a meaningful way. The RSS Education Center includes educational articles, video tutorials, RSS tools, and support resources, all in an easy-to-navigate section of the FeedForAll website. The RSS Education Center is designed to teach the intricacies of RSS feeds and podcasting, in simple and easy-to-understand terms. NotePage, Inc. has always been proactive about RSS education, and assembling these resources in an easy-to-use learning center made sense to further the adoption of RSS and Podcasting. The resource is freely available to all
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Monday, February 15, 2010
Mobixell launches new solution to mobilise RSS feeds
Mobixell Networks, the leading provider of rich media mobile internet, which offers mobile broadband, mobile video, mobile messaging and mobile advertising solutions, announced today the launch of RSS Gateway; a network centric solution which enables mobile operators to deliver RSS feed services to subscribers. The solution has been designed to offer an alternative to existing client-based RSS feed solutions and enables operators to generate additional revenue and retain a prominent position in the value-chain. The solution allows RSS feeds to be delivered to all multimedia enabled handsets without users having to install and configure a client-based mobile RSS reader. Mobixell's RSS Gateway tracks the feeds of selected websites, be it news, sports, weather, stock quotes or podcasts and sends registered subscribers the newly available content as an alert service (as a snippet with a link) via SMS or MMS. The URL to the target website is embedded in the notification message, prompting the subscriber to launch a browsing session. In this way operators can add to the range of Web 2.0 services they are able to deliver, to drive additional revenue and promote customer loyalty. For the subscriber, it's a an innovative and convenient way to receive RSS feed alerts on their mobile phone
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Google Reader lets you subscribe to any page on the web
At Google we're always looking for ways to take advantage of work being done in other parts of the organization. So when a team approached us with a way to follow changes from websites without feeds, we jumped at the opportunity. Post by Liza Ma, Product Manager.
Feeds make it easy to follow updates to all kinds of webpages, from blogs to news sites to Craigslist queries, but unfortunately not all pages on the web have feeds. Today we're rolling out a change in Google Reader that lets you create a custom feed to track changes on pages that don't have their own feed.
These custom feeds are most useful if you want to be alerted whenever a specific page has been updated. For example, if you wanted to follow Google.org's latest products, just type "http://www.google.org/products.html" into Reader's "Add a subscription" field. Click "create a feed", and Reader will periodically visit the page and publish any significant changes it finds as items in a custom feed created just for that page.
Feeds make it easy to follow updates to all kinds of webpages, from blogs to news sites to Craigslist queries, but unfortunately not all pages on the web have feeds. Today we're rolling out a change in Google Reader that lets you create a custom feed to track changes on pages that don't have their own feed.
These custom feeds are most useful if you want to be alerted whenever a specific page has been updated. For example, if you wanted to follow Google.org's latest products, just type "http://www.google.org/products.html" into Reader's "Add a subscription" field. Click "create a feed", and Reader will periodically visit the page and publish any significant changes it finds as items in a custom feed created just for that page.
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