Please DO Feed the Sites: Introduction
January 2nd, 2008 by admin
It’s been pointed out to me recently, and rightly so, that although I’ve been telling everyone how important it is to have and promote and use RSS feeds for their sites, I haven’t stopped to explain anything about how one would actually go about doing that. Personally, I recommend the use of RSS Pixy Dust, but, if you don’t happen to have that available, it gets a little more complicated.
I’ve decided that the best way to provide a useful explanation that will satisfy the most people is to break the whole thing up into a series of articles that I’m calling ?Please DO Feed the Sites.? In this way, people can look for the parts they need, and, if I should miss something, I can just tag it on later as an extra part. Currently, I have it planned as follows:
- Part 1: Introduction (You’re reading it now.)
- Part 2: What Is RSS?
- Part 3: Creating Outgoing Feeds
- Part 4: Using Incoming Feeds
If I can get the time (and there’s enough interest,) I will continue the series by showing you the creation of a hand-coded and maintained RSS feed which may be a possible working solution for some sites. I will also try to move on to a walkthrough demonstration showing the creation of database-driven, dynamically maintained and updated RSS feeds. I may also add other parts later.
I’m aiming high with this, but, again, it depends on the kind of response I get. If this is the kind of useful content that you want to see here, then you gotta let me know.
Thank you all, code well, and good night.
By Timothy Dungan
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Timothy Dungan (aka ptvGuy) is a public television station web developer with over 25 years of computer experience and runs a plain-English blog and podcast about web development, web standards, and web accessibility at http://www.ptvguy.com (Repository of the DECLARATION OF STANDARDS COMPLIANCE.)
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This entry was posted on Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008 at 4:15 am and is filed under RSS Feeds. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.






