10 Ways to use RSS Feeds in Web 2.0 Era
- If you're a Yahoo fan, you can get all the content you want delivered straight to your Yahoo homepage via RSS feeds.
- Any MySpace profile that has a blog also has an RSS feed. Instead of logging all the way in to MySpace's somewhat wonky site, just subscribe to your favorite blogs and read them in your feed reader.
- If you love Google News, but need more specialized news, you can create a specialized Google News alert that's delivered to you via an RSS feed.
- YouTube users will especially appreciate this one: you can follow your favorite director, channel, or keyphrase via RSS feeds.
- Looking for something on Craigslist? Every category has an RSS feed, and you can even program your parameters.
- Any tag in the social bookmarking site del.icio.us, whether that may be freeware, popular, Apple, etc., has an RSS feed that you can subscribe to.
- Fans of Digg will appreciate that any user, tag, or featured page can be subscribed to via an RSS tag.
- All you foodies out there will love the convenience of getting recipes and tips delivered right to you: the Food Network has an RSS feed titled "Food Network Highlights" that brings the very best of this stellar site to you.
- If you're looking for a job, you can craft your own RSS feeds at Monster.com, or use one of their own preprogrammed RSS feeds instead. To craft your own, simply do a search with your specific needs, and then subscribe to the search results via your feed reader of choice.
- Yes, even the White House has its own RSS feed; you'll get updates on White House news, presidential speeches, and much more.
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