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Living in XML?
Merlin Mann | Sep 17 2004
Danny O’Brien, among others, has been noting how many nerds have started piping as much of their life as possible through personal XML feeds, using stuff like RSS and Atom. I’m intrigued by this, but, apart from the 100 sites I read each day in NetNewsWire, I’m only dipping a toe into the world of personal RSS. I get a feed of shows my friends are attending and Netflix recommendations, but not too much more. I know there's a lot more out there. One thing I’ve really started to love is reading comments and updates via RSS and Atom (instead of email). I think Flickr is way ahead of the curve on this one: I can get feeds of practically anything, including recent comments on my photos, recent photos by my contacts or even photos by keyword. I’d love to see the folks at LiveJournal look at something similar. It’s a brilliant way to consolidate and “bubble up” information that used to require a lot of drill-down in scattered locations. It seems like the way things are heading, to be sure. Anyway, I’d love to hear how you are using XML feeds in ways that you find productive and cool; How have you piped your life? Not so much the typical use of feeds for blogs and news—we all know about that. But how about personal calendars, reminders, work notes, and the rest of the administrivia in your life? Was it hard to setup? Anybody keeping a private blog? Let's hear about it. Layman’s terms and links gratefully accepted, as ever. (Also: aching for the next round of that Atom vs. RSS [.91|1|2] breakdance fight? Take it outside, Boogaloo Shrimp. We're keeping it friendly on this street. TIA.) 28 Comments
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I use del.icio.us for my...Submitted by Sam Newman (not verified) on September 18, 2004 - 2:55am.
I use del.icio.us for my links (read laters, books, tools etc), the RSS feed from which I use to power the recent links on my blog. Likewise I read blogs via bloglines, and use the OPML to power the blogroll on my site. I recently came across FeedBurner - an online service which takes any RSS feed, and can then do a variety of useful things, such as splicing in Flickr and del.icio.us posts, or even optimizing your RSS/Atom feeds to make sure they appear in the nest way possible for whichever aggregator is reading it. Best of all, all of these services are free (at least for now!). » POSTED IN:
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