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News feeds

News feed viewers getting better according to WP

         

chiyo

4:43 am on Mar 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



[washingtonpost.com...]

Im a newzcrawler fan, mentioned in the article. For quicj access to news articles these desktop readers are great for pinpointing just what you want. They also represent an opportnuity for content site publishers, by creating RSS feeds and publicizing them.

It is now much easier than ever before, with a bit of scripting or refining ability to create your own highly relevant portal on your own site using RSS feeds, aggregating and refining them together.

She hones in on an onteresting point. Why the bigger sites like MSN etc DONT have RSS feeds is that the news viewers represent a competitor to portals. The implications are fascinating for the politics of content delivery on the net, and its the first time that i know of that a mainstream news source has taken up the point beyond blogging.

Given that, Google news has taken over as my news research tool at the moment and i still pop into blogdex and daypop, showing that portal like news tools on the Web rather than the desktop, if done correctly by their content not being influenced by money and commercial networks, are not down and out just yet.

Brett_Tabke

9:21 am on Mar 10, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



It's rather amusing to watch isn't it? Notice all the negative stories popping up about blogs? I bet we see more and more digs by traditional media. They will go - but they will go kicking and screaming. Every forum, every blog, and every day newsletter represents shrinking eye balls for them.

lorax

2:56 pm on Mar 10, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I'm a big fan of on-topic news feeds. I am a regular user of Meerkat which provides newsfeeds on a variety of technical information. My preferences are set to include PHP and XML related websites.

The only complaint I have is that I can't filter out the off-topic stuff from these site. In other words, the preferences are based on website selection rather than topic selection. Since RSS is based on XML and there are plenty of schemas out there which include a definition of "Topic" for an article, I don't understand why they don't simply ad a filter to allow us to choose our topics rather than allow everything from a particular website. To me, that would be far more useful.

chiyo

3:24 pm on Mar 10, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Agred lorax. Youlld think php/xml experts would be able to do something as simple as dividing their feeds into subject areas yes?

Some aggregators provide search facilities now, so you only see what items your search crietria ask for. the new RSS protocols are making it easier to do this with more meta information fields. But yes, at one time, someone would have to download the entire feed.

The technology, mainly open source driven, is imporving all the time. We may see what you want more in future.

lorax

3:31 pm on Mar 10, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I'm actually in the process of writing a news feed for an industry that is near & dear to my heart. I have worked out the mechanics of how to allow the reader to choose their topics. I hope to get my feed on-line end of the month though I suspect it may be mid-April before it goes live.