Jinsoo Terry - Multicultural Education

How You Can Interact with the Keyboard
Culture
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Paula Fellingham

 

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If you’re still worried about SPAM in your inbox, learn how RSS feeds give you back all the control over the content you receive from publishers.

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Subscribe to this blog's RSS feed...

What is RSS?

And why should you care?

Good questions. First, here’s why you should care.

Unlike getting website updates or ezines by email, RSS feeds give you absolute, 100% complete control.

How?

You don’t have to put your email address on a newsletter list. When you subscribe to the RSS feed by putting in your email address, your email address stays private in the RSS program and we don’t even see it.

If you want to stop receiving content, you don’t have to request to be “taken off the list.”

One click and poof… the subscription is gone.

Plus, since there’s no email list involved, there’s no way a publisher can sell, rent or give away your email to anyone else.

That’s right… no more spam, viruses, phishing, or identity theft. And best of all, no reason to put yourself at the mercy of the publisher’s intentions.

By subscribing to the RSS feed, you won’t need to suffer through the legalese in the privacy policy (if there is one) looking for loopholes that will fill your inbox with junk.

Again, if you don’t like the content, you can make it disappear as fast as you can change a TV channel…with just one click.

Awesome, huh?

That is great!

Umm… So what is RSS?

Alright! Now let’s go over RSS.

RSS is a simply an Internet technology allowing busy people to receive updates from the blogs and web sites of their choice and interest.

Here is the essence of an RSS feed — you subscribe and then you automatically receive in your feed reader the new content that is posted to the blog.

You may already be using a feed reader, and not even realize it.

If you have a personalized home page like My Yahoo or My MSN, you are using RSS. That’s how content that you pick — like news topics, weather or quotes of stock you are interested in — appears on your personal page. You can also add content from any blog or other site that uses RSS to provide updates.

If you use the Firefox browser, you can receive RSS feeds from your tool bar by using the Live Bookmarks function. You can also receive RSS feeds from the tool bar of Internet Explorer 7.0.

There are also desktop-based feed readers that function like an email program such as Newsgator or Feed Demon.

If this all sounds complicated, it’s really not.

RSS can give you the same convenience of email subscription, without any of the spam-like experiences of giving out your email address to potentially unscrupulous characters.

Sounds good. So how do you subscribe to a RSS feed?

Look for subscription or feed options on the blogs you are interested in. You might see a variety of colorful buttons called “chicklets,” which are links to RSS feed services (usually free services). Or you might see a box that allows you to put your email address in and subscribe to the feed right at the blog.

Keyboard Culture Blog Community offers you both.

If the site you want to subscribe to uses RSS Feeds (like Keyboard Culture Blog Community and many other popular sites), you’ll likely see the standard RSS icon, which takes you to a page that will give you a selection of the most popular feed readers so you can pick yours.

This is the new standard RSS icon:

Sometimes there will be a chicklet for your particular reader right on the blog that will take you to the appropriate subscription page. You may see these (among others):

Google Reader or Homepage

Add to Technorati Favorites!

Subscribe with Bloglines

Add to My Yahoo!

Finally, you may also see little orange buttons that say XML or RSS. Often these chicklets will take you to a page that looks like code gibberish. In this case, you simply cut and paste the page URL from your browser window and manually paste it into your feed reader subscription box.

Hopefully this last method will soon disappear, never to be seen again.

Summary: RSS feeds solve BIG problems.

RSS is being accepted at a rapid rate, because it’s a good for everyone.

The benefit to you is obvious. And it’s good for blog publishers too, because we want to make sure that people feel comfortable subscribing, and that our message is delivered and not deleted by overzealous spam filters.

If there’s anything here that is confusing, or you have a question, please email us and I’ll be happy to help!

Bloggers: Would you like to use this tutorial on your blog?

You’re free to use it word for word or change it to meet your needs. If you would link back to Keyboard Culture Blog Community to say “thanks,” that would be great. Here’s a suggested acknowledgement:

“Thanks to Keyboard Culture Blog Community for a helping hand with this RSS mini-tutorial.”

Here is a listing of some more popular RSS Feed Readers. If you do not see your favorite feed reader website or if you are using a desktop feed reader the url for this blog's feed is http://feeds.feedburner.com/JinsooTerry-MulticulturalEducation

 

Google Reader or Homepage

Add to My Yahoo!

Subscribe with Bloglines

BittyBrowser

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Rojo

Subscribe in FeedLounge

Subscribe with Pluck RSS reader

MultiRSS

Rss fwd

Eskobo

gritwire

BotABlog

Add to Technorati Favorites!

Add to netvibes

Subscribe in NewsAlloy

Subscribe in myEarthlink

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Convert RSS to PDF

Solosub

Blogarithm

Simpify!

 

Add to your Favorite Social Bookmarking site...

What is social bookmarking?

In a social bookmarking system, users store lists of Internet resources that they find useful. These lists are either accessible to the public or a specific network, and other people with similar interests can view the links by category, tags, or even randomly.

They also categorize their resources by the use of informally assigned, user-defined keywords or tags. Most social bookmarking services allow users to search for bookmarks which are associated with given "tags", and rank the resources by the number of users which have bookmarked them.

Its increasing popularity and competition have extended the services to offer more than just sharing bookmarks, such as rating, commenting, the ability to import and export, add notes, reviews, email links, automatic notification, feed subscription, web annotation, create groups and social networks.

Listed below are some of the most popular social bookmarking sites. To add this blog simply click on the icon. If you do not see your favorite social bookmarking website the url for this blog's is http://www.keyboard-culture-multicultural-education.com

 

Comments and questions are welcome...

After each blog entry click on the "Ask a question or leave a comment" link then send us your questions or comments.  We really look forward to hearing from you. Don't forget to email this blog to a friend.