How Google helped destroy adoption of RSS feeds
Sorry
https://openrss.org/blog/how-google-helped-destroy-adoption-of-rss-feeds
https://openrss.org/blog/how-google-helped-destroy-adoption-of-rss-feeds
But it's clear that Google has a history of building products with RSS and killing the RSS support once it's established a user base.
Not only RSS. It was the same with XMPP, and probably other things I don't remember now. Better don't rely on Google products.
The biggest and most obvious encroachment on standard email that Gmail does is opting for a tag system over a folder system. It is superior, but nonstandard. If you rely on this, it's Gmail vendor lock-in for you.
https://news.google.com/rss will redirect to a feed for the top content in your region.
You can also make a search and paste that URL into your feed reader and it will find the feed to subscribe to that search.
The browser had a built-in RSS button that would display in the browser location bar when any website you're on had an RSS feed available. Clicking the button would then take you to the RSS feed for that web page
How would this work? Do websites with rss feeds normally publish the url to that feed in some standard place? Are there any third party extensions that do it?
How would this work? Do websites with rss feeds normally publish the url to that feed in some standard place?
feeds are usually advertised in the page header as below, with type
set to either application/rss+xml
or application/atom+xml
.
<head>
<link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="Example Feed" href="https://example.com/feed/" />
</head>
Are there any third party extensions that do it?
i don't know about chrom[e|ium], but i use Awesome RSS for firefox.
How did I not know websites did this. Here I was always trying to guess the urls a few times before giving up lol. Today I learned...
Thanks for the extension suggestion too!
Most readers will also do this auto-discovery for you. So typically you can just paste the page or article URL and it will find the feed.
Of course the extension is nicer because you don't need to guess and check, you get a quick indicator if there is a feed or not.
Personally I use Want My RSS because I like the preview which then lets me know if it is a full-text feed or just summaries. This is also Firefox only. But extensions for other browsers are available.
Also, some (most?) RSS readers don't need the path to the feed directly. You give them the regular URL and they'll figure it out. TinyTinyRSS does it.
Yes, they do. In no particular order:
Google is a fucking nightmare. Iām not gonna cite the article but damn they employed every dirty trick in the book it seems. The more I learn about EEE the more it disgusts me. All in the name of manipulation, monopoly and money.