What Is RSS

December 20th, 2006


RSS is technology - a simple software program - that allows you to access web and blog content automatically. The acronym’s most popular translation is “Really Simple Syndication. Once your browser or computer has an RSS reader on board, you can subscribe to any number of RSS “feeds.” A feed is simply a way in which a reader may subscribe to website content - most commonly blogs or news sites. A news site, for example, may list their latest headlines or entire articles in their feed every time a new article is published. A blog would publish this feed as a series of recent posts.

Feeds are published by millions of publishers, from small individuals to large organizations like Newsweek. The value of a feed is that it brings the most current site content to you in a format that is easily scanned; further, you are spared the task of visiting each source site each day. This is typically done through the use of what is called an ‘aggregator’ or ‘feed reader’.

Feed readers or RSS readers, are software programs that run on your computer (or PDA or phone); let you easily subscribe to feeds, and allow you to read through them efficiently. Some are relatively simple, showing the headline and summary. The fancier ones often work with (or in) your browser to make viewing the material look much like the source page. Once you have a reader on your computer, subscribing to a feed with is an easy click or drag from your browser. Sites that provide RSS feeds will usually have a button for that purpose.

There are several RSS feed formats as well as one with an entirely different methodology called Atom. Atom has become popular with some bloggers and blogging tools. Some aggregators can read both. The other acronyms you will see in “feedspeak” are XML, which stands for ‘extensible markup language’ and is the code standard for these simple text feeds. An ‘OPML” file is a format for indexing hierarchical feed lists. If you dive into this web habit in a big way, your aggregator or reader may keep your subscription list in an OPML file.

An RSS feed is a great method for staying abreast of issues and topics that interest you. There are a number of feed “libraries,” so to speak, from which you can learn what’s out there in your areas of interest. Google has a built-in reader that makes the subscription process easy, as does Yahoo. Firefox has a downloadable extension for the purpose of aggregating RSS feeds, as well as a default ability to save RSS feeds as “live bookmarks” that update via the RSS feed. You can download a number of stand alone readers and aggregators; you can find them through a simple web search.

The whole RSS “movement” is a step towards utilizing the Internet more efficiently. The trick is to avoid overloading your email inbox with daily reports that you end up ignoring most of the time. For that purpose, there are sites like Feedster that will search millions of RSS feeds for articles that are relevant to your interests. Like any search tool, however, these services are hit and miss. They are still working off keywords and sometimes what they find is relevant, sometimes not. But if you want daily news broken into categories, it’s great technology once you learn how to make it work for you.

By Madison Lockwood

Why You Need to Upgrade your Version of Windows

September 8th, 2006

Windows XP

With Identity theft and viruses on the rise, Windows users are vulnerable to many attacks via your home computer. If you have Windows 95, 98, 98 SE, and ME users should upgrade to Windows XP. It has been 11 years since Windows 95 and 8 years since Windows 98 has debuted. A lot has changed since since 95. Windows XP is far superior in terms of security and performance. Modern Windows uses a journaling file system which makes crashes far safer and far between. The second point is that Microsoft stopped supporting old legacy operating systems, such as 95, 98, 98 SE and ME. If you are using your old windows computer on the net, you are vulnerable to many unfixed holes in the operating system. Many known Viruses and Spy-ware are free to infect your system though your browser. Microsoft has even offered large upgrades to Windows XP. The upgrades are, XP Service Pack 1 and XP Service Pack 2. Make sure you upgrade your version to at least SP2. SP2 is a big upgrade in features and security. Upgrading is free with any legal version of XP trough Windows Update.

Ubuntu Linux

If you don’t have the money to move to XP, consider using the free Linux operating system Ubuntu. Ubuntu Linux makes switching easy and offers much more features and security then pre 2000 operating systems. Installing Linux has become very simple. Download or have a disk Mailed to you, Back up to CD all your important files on your current version of Windows. Place the new Linux disk into the CD drive and reboot. If your computer is set up to boot from CD, Linux will automatically start and guides you though the installation process.

Windows Update
Ubuntu Linux

Microsoft a love hate relationship

July 9th, 2006

I use Microsoft products every day. They are my business and my passion. I also can’t stand the bulky, buggy, invasive software Microsoft has become. Microsoft continues to make their costumers jump trough hoops just to use the software. When you buy Window you will have to call or have your software verified online. This may seem like a small inconvenience, but when the update goes bad or you repair computers for a living, it is a pain. Microsoft also patches Windows with updates that break. I have had many calls on Microsoft’s Genuine Advantage patch that detects illegal versions of Windows and puts up a nag screen. I have had many problems with legal versions displaying the message and accuse the legal owners of fraud. They also make it hard to remove the update. They shouldn’t have even be include this patch without the owners consent. I feel like i am a hypocrite for telling my clients to turn on automatic updates and having windows put on some spy-ware on their computers. OK sorry for the rant.

Free Open Source Software

April 6th, 2006

Fire Fox

You have just purchased a new computer and realized that it came with no software. Good news, their is lots of free software that can be downloaded. With a open source boom in the last year and a half, many companies are now releasing open source software. Open source software is a matter of the users freedom to run, copy, distribute, study, change and improve the software. One success story has been, Mozilla FireFox, is an open source browser that has given us a better alternative to Microsoft’s IE. Here are some of my recommendations.

Operating systems (Wanting to get rid of Microsoft’s XP or Vista)

Browsers (Replacement for IE 6)

  • Firefox:

Office Tools ( Replacement for Microsoft’s Office Suite Program)

  • Open Office - Compatible with Microsoft’s Office. Perfect for the home user. I recommend it highly.

Photo Editing Software ( Replacement for Photoshop)

Spyware Remover

Instant Messenger ( Replacement for Yahoo Messenger and AOL Chat)

HOW-TO Choose Anti Virus Software

April 5th, 2006

Choosing Anti Virus software can be a little mind blowing. Their are countless companies claiming that their software is superior. The two most important factors to consider are, How good does the software detect “in the wild viruses, and How often does the software give false positives. You must also decide between a paid version or a FREE version. I suggest going with a paid version if you do things on the internet that make you high risk for getting a virus or if you are a new computer user.

Some Free Anti Virus Software:

  • Avast Home - my current preference ,catches almost everything, it has a very bad User Interface and is complicated.
  • Command Antivirus- free online version, paid downloaded version
  • AVG - WAS a favorite of mine, it just doesn’t catch much.

Some Paid Anti Virus Software:

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