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Everything That's On My Mind

 Monday, February 06, 2006

OK, I admit it. I'm a techno-geek. I own one of the original PalmPilot PDAs. I still have it in a drawer somewhere…cracked screen and all. Technology is all over my life. Every now and then, however, I'm uncharacteristically slow in adopting a new technology. I've been hearing the term RSS for years, but never really took the time to understand the technology. Now that I do, I wonder why it took me so long. RSS (and ATOM) feeds are great time-management tools if you know how to use them.

I'm a voracious reader, particularly when it comes to news items and magazine articles on topics that interest me. Long ago, I learned about the benefits of pre-reading and skimming. Pre-reading is a technique for quickly determining the topic and general content of an article to determine if it is worth spending time reading it in depth. Some people call this skimming but in my opinion skimming is a different skill, somewhere between pre-reading and normal reading. Both pre-reading and skimming are important time-management techniques. If you read as much as I do, you need learn them.

With the advent of the Internet, we have access (and most of it free) to more information sources than anyone could have imagined just a couple decades ago. For someone like me, this can create a time-management nightmare. There are easily 50+ web sites that I visit on a regular basis, from The Detroit News to Christianity Today to Rotten Tomatoes, not to mention all the other bloggers I read. That’s where RSS comes in. Most online publications (including bloggers like me) now offer an RSS feed, which provides the title and the first few paragraphs of the content. With a good RSS reader/aggregator, you can be notified when a new article is posted and quickly determine if it’s worth reading or not. This can save you lots of surfing time.

So I’m a little embarrassed to admit that I’m just now getting up to speed on this technology, but better late than never, right? If you’re an information-aholic like me, you need to check out this technology. I haven’t actually calculated how much time I’m saving, but I’m confident it’s significant. Here are a few of the RSS aggregators I’ve tried, with some comments. Since I’m a cheapskate, these are all free.

  • My Yahoo lets you add RSS feeds to your home page but you only get article titles, so I didn’t find it all that helpful.
  • The Firefox browser has some RSS support (called Live Bookmarks) built-in, but it’s not very feature-rich. Habari Xenu is a plug-in for Firefox that is much superior to the built-in support.
  •  There are stand-alone Windows applications like Feed Explorer and Sharp Reader. They’re nice, but I prefer something that’s integrated into software I already use regularly.
  • Right now, I’m using intraVnews (thanks for the tip, Bob), which is a plug-in for Microsoft Outlook. Since Outlook is always running on my PC, this has been the most convenient aggregator I’ve tried. Until I find something better, I think I’m sticking with this one.
If you’re a patient soul, Internet Explorer 7 and Outlook 12 are supposed to have built-in RSS support, but I wouldn’t hold my breath. Besides, why wait? You could be saving valuable time right now.

P.S. In case you haven’t noticed, the link for my RSS feed is on the right, below the calendar.

Monday, February 06, 2006 - 03:04 PM Eastern Standard Time    #       Comments [2]
Tuesday, February 07, 2006 3:05:29 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
For what it's worth, the "My Yahoo" homepage defaults can be changed so that you see not only the title but also the first few lines of the blog entry. Click on the "edit" link of the module and choose "edit content" from the drop-down box. (Javascript will have to be enabled for yimg.com.) On the options screen that comes up, there will be a line that reads, "For each article, display the: headline." "Headline" is in a drop-down box; click on it and choose "Headline and short summary" instead. If you want, you can also click in a box that says, "Apply these settings to all headline modules on my pages." The Red Oaks blog is now the top item that loads in my web browser home page. No pressure!

You can also get RSS feeds in Thunderbird email reader. From the "Local Folders" screen, click on "Create a New Account," choose "RSS News & Blogs," and follow the instructions. It can either load the actual web page or a summary. I suppose the same sort of thing can be done in Outlook Express. The only problem is that if you choose the web page to load, it loads rather slowly; but if you choose the summary to load, there is no easy way to get to the full page.
Keith Schooley
Tuesday, February 07, 2006 5:06:45 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
I knew Thunderbird had support for RSS, but forgot to mention it. If only it had PIM features like a calendar I might switch. That and a sync program for my PDA. I'm starting to sound like Navin Johnson.

Didn't know about the My Yahoo settings, thanks for the tip.
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