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How to Get RSS FeedsBy Elizabeth Wasserman Most working parents do a juggling act every day. The demands of raising children, earning a living, maintaining a home and finding some "me" time are all balls in the air. Now time spent surfing on the Internet can be added to the mix. The Internet makes an enormous amount of information available when it comes to every facet of your life -- from news to parenting to shopping to checking out industry or friends' blogs. But if you're like most people, you need a better way to get and sift through all this content. That is, without having to go out and search dozens of web sites for updates, or wade through numerous email newsletters from various publications each day. The solution? A technology called RSS (for Really Simple Syndication) can help you save Internet surfing time by delivering all of your favorite web content directly to your computer, laptop or handheld device. In the course of one day, you may access dozens of web sites, venturing out on the Internet time and again to see if any information is new or helpful. RSS, on the other hand, allows you to sign up for content feeds from many of the same sites and then access their up-to-date content all at once and all in one place. For example, RSS feeds from your favorite sites can be automatically delivered to your email in-box, a single personal web page, or to folders within your web browser. With RSS, you don't have to remember web site addresses, and you don't have to deal with online advertisements or pop-ups because the content comes straight to you. And there are few privacy implications because, for the most part, you don't have to give any of these RSS-feed web sites your email address to get their content delivered. You've probably already stumbled on to RSS at sites you visit often but didn't know it. Maybe you've noticed the little orange Chicklet-shaped square icons cropping up on your favorite web sites near the site's navigation toolbar. The orange squares often contain the initials RSS. When you see these little squares (or simply a link that says "RSS Feed") it means that you can get that web site's content feed. Or the orange squares might be followed by other, different-colored icons that say My Yahoo!, Google, Newsgator or Bloglines, among other names. And these RSS icons can appear elsewhere on a site, too, so take a good look around if they aren't in the navigation toolbar. Robyn Tippins, a Virginia-based mother of four who blogs about RSS for business users at Practical Blogging, says she gets a number of parenting, cooking and entertaining RSS feeds from blogs, in addition to keeping up with technology news through RSS. "I subscribe to 200 feeds a day," Tippins says. "I just scan a lot of them, and then there are 20-or-so mom-related sites I get feeds from. A lot of it is just staying in touch with old friends by keeping up with their blogs. RSS feeds are a huge convenience because I can never remember all my friends' web site addresses." How to get feeds
RSS feed tutorial Where to find new feeds To subscribe to a web site or blog's RSS feed, just click the site's little orange square or text RSS link. Depending on your choice, the feeds will instantly start showing up in your email box, on your personal web page or within your web browser's toolbar. With all the time you'll now save by not having to surf the web as much, you might actually be able read a few more blogs or sites every day. Or maybe you'll just use some of that elusive "me" time you'll gain to take a break from the wired world -- thanks to RSS. Elizabeth Wasserman is a freelance writer and editor based in Fairfax, Va. She writes for a variety of publications including Congressional Quarterly, Inc magazine, and she edits the online publication CIO Strategy Center. Next featured articles
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