RSS Feeds (5 Viewers)

V

Senior Member
Jun 8, 2005
20,110
#2
  • V

    V

yahoo.news.com

this is what i do; go for advanced search, search for any of these words: juventus + calcio, none of these words in the url of the site: tribalfootball.com and you're set.

i'm mainly interested in calcio so that works for me. for juve only news try rss-ing rebel's news blog. www.freewebs.com/juverebel
 

Martin

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2000
56,913
#3
Righto. Back to Rami's question, vbulletin has built-in rss capabilities, which work fine. What we have to do now is wait for Marty to read the manual and figure it all out. :biggrin:
 
OP
Rami

Rami

The Linuxologist
Dec 24, 2004
8,065
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #7
    Martin said:
    It's a beautiful xml document, like this one:
    http://eurosport.com/z/rss.xml
    Way to go to sell the case to upper management:D


    Seriously, RSS feeds, bring news to your desktop, instead of you going to fetch them. Its like an email system for news. You will need an RSS reader (aggregator), I believe firefox has that capability (don't know any readers for M$, as I discovered RSS when I left the dark side:D).
     

    sateeh

    Day Walker
    Jul 28, 2003
    8,020
    #10
    i kinda like going around and browsing in most websites.But the RSS feed would save some time and would be great for the mercato season
     

    JCK

    Biased
    JCK
    May 11, 2004
    125,382
    #14
    Great then, FF has an RSS feed reeder, it is basically a live bookmark. Let us give a rough example, if you have RSS bookmarked BBC news, you would see in your link the latest articles updated when they are posted.
     

    gray

    Senior Member
    Moderator
    Apr 22, 2003
    30,260
    #15
    The easiest way to understand this is to try it.

    In Firefox, go to any news site like http://www.soccernet.com . On the far right side of the address bar there's a small orange icon that indicates that the site has an RSS feed. It looks a bit like this, only 100 times smaller:



    Click on that icon, and save the live bookmark somewhere. When you go to check out that bookmark, you'll see that it automatically updates and creates temporary bookmarks containing headlines of the latest news stories. Click on one of those and you'll be taken to the full story.

    I can't imagine how people can possibly read online news without RSS feeds.
     

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