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Blogging, RSS & Feeds |
How to Make Money With Your Blog?Make money blogging is fun: you enjoy blogging and getting money from blogging. As long as... read more Blog ConstructionBlogs like all forms of writing are an art form that takes knowledge and practice to do we... read more Top 10 Blog Writing TipsMost of the "rules" about writing for ezines and newsletters apply to writing posts for yo... read more The 7-Step RSS Marketing PlanIf you're wondering how to get started with RSS marketing, here's a basic 7-step plan that... read more RSS, Feeds, and AggregatorsWhen you work online all the time, immersed in bits and bytes, hands automatically resting... read more What is Blogging?Blogs have been around for many years but have recently become somewhat a new 'craze'. A B... read more Should Bloggers be Helping Google Fix Their PageRank System?By now, most bloggers have heard the announcement that the Big 3 search engines - Google, ... read more RSS Feeds Just Got Better!We all know that in the world of online internet marketing we need our sites to get good q... read more Real Estate Marketing with RSSRSS (Really Simple Syndication) is an increasingly popular marketing method to syndicate r... read more 10 Reasons to Put RSS on Your Site!RSS and Blogs are the topics of the moment. Seems like everyone is talking about it. Grant... read more Creating A Basic RSS Feed For Your SiteThe future of RSS Feeds and internet marketing is looking bright and promising. It would b... read more Are Blog Meant for Raves and Rants?Blogging is the latest internet craze and it may turn out to be just that and killed off i... read more How to Write A Blog... And Survive Blogs and JournalismThe world has seen the emergence of a new style of journalism, based on a 'raw feed' direc... read more Why Journal Writing On The Web? Blogs Are Journals Giving Anyone An Identity, And An Awesome ForumJournal writing used to be a private, personal experience done late at night, scribbling h... read more |
RSS Round-Up: Whats Happening with Simple Syndication?Have you been following the explosion of RSS -- Really Simple Syndication -- activity online? Seems this new method of "getting the word out" is picking up steam. Why? Partly because of the Davids, and partly because of the Goliaths. The "Davids" -- the little guys -- are able to deploy the technology since it is easy to use and usually is a feature of Blogging software (Blogging is another emerging trend -- for more articles on Blogging, visit WebFadds.com). You just click the option and send your RSS feed (broadcast your articles) out to subscribing sites. And the "Goliaths", the likes of Yahoo, Google, MSN and others, are all catering to it in various ways. Let's look at some of the latest ways this is playing out... Micros oft joins the battle with an RSS Service Info rmation week reported in March 2005, that Microsoft is now testing an RSS technology that will allow users to choose the RSS feeds they want to see. They are doing this to keep up with (Microsoft always seems reactive, rather than proactive as a company) Google, Yahoo, and Ask Jeeves who already offer similar services. You can review the test site at the super secret test site -- www.start.com/1/ (well... it was published in the Information Week article). So, Microsoft Enters the Game? Ho hum for Microsoft, as they lag once again, in leading the wave. But, this is an indication of how seriously this Goliath is taking RSS, and you know where that leads... direct into the next release of Windows software. Pod dcasting, RSS, & Attachments... Oh My Now here's a high octane way of using a combination of syndication feeds, and "Podcasting" (think of Broadcasting, but doing it from your computer to other devices like Apple's iPod) to get your message out. Maybe that's why one entrepreneur using this method, Steve Wirrick, calls his stock insights, sent via an audio attachment to an RSS feed, "High Octane Trading." You can read more about it (and get the feed) at Mr. Wirricks site (www.stevewirrick.com) , where he describes it as, "a dynamic audio learning tool that takes advantage of a grassroots media revolution called, podcasting." How to listen: To listen to a Podcast (and there are others -- check out iPodder.org), you need a free program called "iPodder -- Cross Platform podcast receiver"... get it at http://ipodder.sourcef orge.net/index.php. RSS meets PodCasting: Power to the people! Most people are just waking up to RSS syndication as a means to distribute the written word. They forgot about attachments. Watch this technology... with a free method of creation, and distribution, Radio could be set to learn from PodCasters what Print & TV journalists already understood from Bloggers -- the power is shifting. What are you going to Podcast? BEEP ... your RSS Feed is Calling... R SS feeds on your cell phone -- who'd have thunk it? Now there's a service called "Feed Beep" which allows you to sign up and receive your crucial feeds, from employment information to medical, to Auctions. Looks like a start-up, and it appears to be free (for now) -- see www.feedbeep.com/. Can You Hear your RSS Feed Now?: Great. Now that noisy guy at the theater can also get calls about his eBay auctions. What next? The service also sends feeds to your Pager. Hmmmm. What could be so important? I'm not sure, but it looks like we're destined to find out. But wait a minute... what about PodCasting RSS feeds to phones -- your phone becomes a Radio receiver. Hmmmm. Let the Whole World Know your Schedule... There's a Beta site ("Beta" simply means they're still testing it, and it's not quite ready for us Alpha people) up now where you can create an RSS Calendar. You set up your event calendar, create an RSS channel, then family and friends can view your calendar. Take it for a spin at RSSCalendar -- www.rsscalendar.com ... it's free. Calendar to the World: The site states you can share your Calendar with unlimited users. Hmmm. How is this different from calendars you can set up on Yahoo, MSN, etc.? Now, those who are too lazy to check a link you give them at those sites, can be force fed your calendar in their RSS Reader. OOPS... those same lazy people, will also have to go get and install an RSS reader (just do a Google search to find free RSS readers you can use). Fat chance if they are too lazy to simply link to a static calendar you might already have set up. But... if Microsoft builds this technology in... then... well! And, that takes us full circle on this edition of the RSS Round-up. Scott Frangos is a writer, designer, and eCommerce marketer with over 20 years experience in Advertising. He has taught eCommerce, HTML, and Business courses at the college level in Portland, Oregon, and currently is Managing Partner of WebFadds.com. He also enjoys canoeing in the Pacific Northwest, with his wife and partner, Pepper. You can subscribe to the WebFadds.com RSS feed at: http://feeds.feedbu rner.com/Webfaddscom a> |
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