RSS is the best way to consume content online. It always has been, and it still is. Not gated, not filtered, no ads, just want you want. If you’re not using it, can I strongly suggest you giv…
Looking for the best free RSS feed readers? We've got you covered. These powerful feed readers will help you create streams of the content you care about. Click to learn...
Every Bluesky and Mastodon account offers an RSS feed. This means you can use any of the best RSS readers to follow posts from any specific user. This is an ideal solution if you mostly want to keep up with the posts of a couple people.
Play 2.0 Adds YouTube Channel Support, Folders, and a New Premium Subscription
Marcos Tanaka’s Play has become the way I watch YouTube, which isn’t something I expected would happen as much as I’ve enjoyed the app since its launch early last year. The app, available on the iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple TV, started as a way to save YouTube links to watch later. That made Play
RSS fans!
You can follow any Mastodon account via RSS by just adding ".rss" to the end of the account's public profile URL.
To find a user's public profile URL, click on their profile image within Mastodon.
For example, if you click on FediTips' profile image you get this page in a new tab:
https://mstdn.social/@feditips
So, to follow FediTips through RSS, use this address:
https://mstdn.social/@feditips.rss
This will only show that account's public posts. Other posts will not be visible on the RSS feed.
#RSS #MastoTips #FediTips #Mastodon
I’ve been working on the RSS Feeds. Now there are three of them. The Main RSS Feed This feed gets you everything. It includes the MacSparky Labs posts as well, but you’ll only see content in those posts matching up with your membership level. The Main Feed Without MacSparky Labs Posts I publish a lot... Continue reading →
This is part 1 of 5 in a series of posts for Building Connected Courses: Feed WordPress 101 »» Basic Concepts of Syndication «« – and what to think about even before y…
Sometimes you want total control over what you consume on a website, without an algorithm or newsletter telling you what's important. RSS feeds let you make your own choices about what you want to read.