How To Find Feed Url?

Google reader can't find my blog at url address - Feed and Web ...?

  • Answer:

    Find Your Blog's RSS Feed URL Perhaps one of the most dreaded questions a blogger will ever face is a request for his or her RSS feed URL. While many bloggers can whip off their blog's address with pride, trying to actually nail down their blog's feed URL is a different matter entirely. Now, we all know by now that RSS stands for really simple syndication but the "really simple" part somehow escapes us when we are petitioned to enter our blog's RSS feed URL into forms when trying to add our blog to a blogging directory. The awful part of all this is that if we don't play ball, our blog doesn't get listed in these directories. For anyone who is trying to bump up blog readership, this is a necessary, all-be-it painful step (and you thought going to the dentist was bad!). For the sake of this tutorial, we will use Blogger--a popular, free blogging platform. Finding a RSS Feed URL You are at a blog directory. You've clicked on "Add a Blog." Under the request for the name of your blog, you see: Blog URL. You add that, then . . . Okay, let's assume that you are sitting staring dumbly at that damnably annoying request for the elusive RSS feed URL. You are wishing you could make the bad form go away but . . . this doesn't happen. Pressing "submit" repeatedly doesn't do the trick either. Those little RSS feed URL gremlins know all about this crafty and useless maneuver. What to do? Shrink down the page and--sighing--navigate over to your Blogger blog. Now comes the painless part. Feeds Find the two Subscribe buttons that should be living over on your sidebar: one is entitled Posts, the other is Comments. Now, click on Posts. You'll see a drop-down menu At the very bottom, you'll notice Atom Right-click on that and go to Properties Click on Properties You'll see Link Properties and underneath that Address. Ah hah! There's your RSS feed URL! Simply run your mouse over it to highlight it, right-click, then press Copy--then Paste the little beggar into forms, as necessary. You've now joined the ranks of accomplished geeks and techies who know a thing or two--and you didn't sprout another grey hair in the process Now, that you've mastered the art of grabbing an RSS feed URL, you are on your way to increased blog readership. If you enjoyed this tutorial, please Facebook or Twitter it and share this article with others. Other source: http://support.google.com/blogger/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=87065 Source: http://athlyngreen.hubpages.com/hub/How-to-find-A-Blogs-RSS-Feed-URL

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A web feed (or news feed) is a data format used for providing users with frequently updated content. Scraping Usually a web feed is made available by the same entity that created the content. Typically the feed comes from the same place as the website. Not all websites, however, provide a feed. Sometimes third parties will read the website and create a feed for it by scraping it. Scraping is controversial since it distributes the content in a manner that was not chosen by the authors. [edit]Technical definition A web feed is a document (often XML-based) whose discrete content items include web links to the source of the content. News websites and blogs are common sources for web feeds, but feeds are also used to deliver structured information ranging from weather data to top-ten lists of hit tunes to search results. The two main web feed formats are RSS and Atom. "Publishing a feed" and "syndication" are two of the more common terms used to describe making a feed available for an information source such as a blog. Web feed content, like syndicated print newspaper features or broadcast programs, may be shared and republished by other websites. (For that reason one popular definition of RSS is Really Simple Syndication.) Feeds are more often subscribed to directly by users with aggregators or feed readers which combine the contents of multiple web feeds for display on a single screen or series of screens. Some modern web browsers incorporate aggregator features. Users typically subscribe to a feed by manually entering the URL of a feed or clicking a link in a web browser. Web feeds are designed to be machine-readable rather than human-readable, which tends to be a source of confusion when people first encounter web feeds. This means that web feeds can also be used to automatically transfer information from one website to another without any human intervention. [edit]Confusion between Web feed and RSS The term RSS is often used to refer to web feeds or web syndication in general, although not all feed formats are RSS. The Blogspace description of using web feeds in an aggregator, for example, is headlined "RSS info" and "RSS readers" even though its first sentence makes clear the inclusion of the Atom format: "RSS and Atom files provide news updates from a website in a simple form for your computer."[2] Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_feed

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