RSS Feed for Morning Improv?
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RSS Feed for Morning Improv?
Howdy folks...
is there an RSS Feed for Morning Improv? If so, what's the URL?
Thanks,
--sam
is there an RSS Feed for Morning Improv? If so, what's the URL?
Thanks,
--sam
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RSS is a cool internet tool for keeping up to date with blog or news sites that offer it. There's a slightly technical outline here which may help answer your question. If not, then I'll explain a little bit now:
An RSS feed is an XML file (no, you don't need to know what that is) that a blog or news site might create automatically when it's updated. As a reader, you need an RSS aggregator, which is a program that reads RSS XML files and presents them to you. It will, say, once an hour, scan all the RSS feeds you've selected and then you see short summaries of the articles, posts or whatever dynamic, updating content that the site contains, including links to the site to see the full items. The advantage is, you see when the sites update, what the content might be, and all that information for several sites is in one, small, convenient application (the aggregator) that doesn't have to download all the graphics, scripts and bells and whistles of a webpage. This about the Morning Improv- How many times a day do you hit the site before Scott updates it? Maybe a couple. Each time you do visit the site, do you know if a panel has been posted or not? No. With an RSS feed and an aggregtor, the aggregator would update when Scott's site updates (within an hour, anyhow) and then you'd know you could click on over and view the panel.
The raw XML in your browser doesn't look very user-friendly, but the aggregator makes sense of it all just like your browser makes sense of HTML and Javascript.
Comixpedia's blog has a feed.
Penny-Arcade has one too.
If Scott were to use one, it might contain summaries of his Morning Im-Blog news posts and notices of when each new MI panel is posted. Of course, since Scott doesn't use any sort of automated CMS (content management system), he'd have to code it by hand, but some people do theirs by hand. (That page even includes a link to this tutorial about how to hand-code an XML feed, which also includes another plain-English language description of RSS, how it works and how to use it.)
Atom, I've not heard of before this, but it's something similar. Granted, I don't know anything about Atom or how well-propogated it is, but I'm willing to bet that RSS becomes the accepted standard.
An RSS feed is an XML file (no, you don't need to know what that is) that a blog or news site might create automatically when it's updated. As a reader, you need an RSS aggregator, which is a program that reads RSS XML files and presents them to you. It will, say, once an hour, scan all the RSS feeds you've selected and then you see short summaries of the articles, posts or whatever dynamic, updating content that the site contains, including links to the site to see the full items. The advantage is, you see when the sites update, what the content might be, and all that information for several sites is in one, small, convenient application (the aggregator) that doesn't have to download all the graphics, scripts and bells and whistles of a webpage. This about the Morning Improv- How many times a day do you hit the site before Scott updates it? Maybe a couple. Each time you do visit the site, do you know if a panel has been posted or not? No. With an RSS feed and an aggregtor, the aggregator would update when Scott's site updates (within an hour, anyhow) and then you'd know you could click on over and view the panel.
The raw XML in your browser doesn't look very user-friendly, but the aggregator makes sense of it all just like your browser makes sense of HTML and Javascript.
Comixpedia's blog has a feed.
Penny-Arcade has one too.
If Scott were to use one, it might contain summaries of his Morning Im-Blog news posts and notices of when each new MI panel is posted. Of course, since Scott doesn't use any sort of automated CMS (content management system), he'd have to code it by hand, but some people do theirs by hand. (That page even includes a link to this tutorial about how to hand-code an XML feed, which also includes another plain-English language description of RSS, how it works and how to use it.)
Atom, I've not heard of before this, but it's something similar. Granted, I don't know anything about Atom or how well-propogated it is, but I'm willing to bet that RSS becomes the accepted standard.
Good morning! That's a nice tnetennba.
- Greg Stephens
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- Joined: Sat Apr 14, 2001 7:00 pm
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As luck would have it, an article about the Coming RSS Revolution.
(No. It will not be televised. But it will be blogged and syndicated.)
(No. It will not be televised. But it will be blogged and syndicated.)
Good morning! That's a nice tnetennba.
I can't make it work for me. I am so stupid. I am not LE37. I am teh sukc. Stupid modern technology, where's Joe Rogan when I need im?
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