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FeedMingle: Mix Your Feeds

June 24th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Technology, Tips N Tricks

feed mingleFeedMingle is an easy way to put all your feeds together in a single RSS feed. Web developers and designers who want a fast way to put several online publications in a single feed can take advantage of this web application. Aside from the fact that FeedMingle’s primary function is to merge feeds together, you can also use it as a RSS/Atom to JSON converter, RSS/Atom to widget generator, RSS to Atom or Atom to RSS Converter.

This is a great tool if you want to publish several blogs in another website or publish blog feeds along with your Twitter feeds. You can also use FeedMingle to merge Twitter accounts and get feeds from both users and publish them somewhere else.

The application does not require you to sign up for an account. You can immediately start merging or creating feeds as soon as you land on FeedMingle’s page. Just place the feeds you want to merge (on for each line) on the text box provided, name your merged feed, and hit the “mingle now” button. Your new feed will be given a unique URL for each of the feed formats. The widget code is also provided on the same page which allows you to do a bit of styling to fit your preference.

The application is very simple yet useful. With it, merging feeds is just a snap. It doesn’t require you to learn any coding whatsoever. Just fire away and merge those feeds.

mingled feeds

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FeedScrub: Weed Out Unwanted Posts on Feeds

January 21st, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted in Tips N Tricks

feedscrub-logoIf you are an RSS fan and likes getting updates through RSS Feeds, then you better check out this one. FeedScrub is a service made for RSS junkies. We all have our favorite sites and blogs, but the thing is, not all articles posted on a particular site will catch your interest. There will probably a post or two that doesn’t concern you. FeedScrub will help you clean-up your RSS feeds.

Feedscrub is like a spam filter for your news feeds. It filters out the posts that are least interesting to you and leaves only the stuff that is relevant. When you Scrub a post about “politics”, the words in that post will be taken and use them to train your filter. After a while your filter learns that you’re not interested in “politics” and filters out posts about “politics”.

How it Works

1. First, tell Feedscrub which feeds you’d like to filter. In return they will give you one feed with all your content aggregated.

2. Next, for each post you’re not interested in, click the “Scrub” button. The more posts you scrub, the more accurate your filter will get.

3. Check your “junk feed” periodically to catch any relevant posts that were auto-scrubbed. If you find any, click the “Save” button.

This is a great tool for cleaning your feeds and filtering posts that are irrelevant to you. You can still view the feeds that were weeded out through the junk feed. Better check them every once in a while to see if you missed a few relevant stories.

feedscrub

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Customize Your Online NewsPaper Using Feed Chronicle

January 8th, 2009 | Comments Off | Posted in Tips N Tricks

feed-chronicle-logoFeedChronicle is one way of organizing your news feeds. Instead of getting them through your feed reader which most people normally do, you can get them in the form of an online newspaper. You can get feeds from popular news site like NY Times to social media sites like Digg.

The service is quite useful if you want to get your news from different sources. Say like you want to get Tech News from Digg Technology and TechCrunch and you like to get World News from CNN or NY Times. Managing your news feeds can be easily accomplished by selecting the source you want for each category. This will save you time subscribing to a particular news category on different news sites. Just select the news sources through a drop down menu and you’ll have your customized online newspaper in a few minutes.

There is just one thing that I noticed when customizing news feeds. There is no option to select a blank source for categories. You are allowed to select five news sources for each news category. For example, I just want to get Sports news from CNN and not from other sources. You have to choose CNN for all five sources or you can select other sources as well. I don’t know how will affect the layout of the pages and It may not be a big deal but I think it’s worth looking into. Other than that, the site looks great. The Ajax interface makes it easy scrolling through the feeds and the customize page is very user friendly. Worth a try.

feed-chronicle-customize-page

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SnackR: Scrolling RSS Updates on your Screen

December 23rd, 2008 | Comments Off | Posted in Tips N Tricks

snackr-logoSnackR is a desktop application powered by Adobe Air and Flex that lets you view RSS feed right on your desktop in a scrolling manner. If you get tired from getting updates from your feed reader, you can use this as an alternative and get updates in a different fashion.

SnackR is a great alternative to normal feed readers available out there. It gives you that news flash thing that scrolls on the bottom of your TV screens. If you are using multiple/dual screens, one way to optimize it is to place it on your secondary screen so it will not be an obstruction to your primary working area. If you are using SnackR on a single monitor, you can easily hide it and let it sit on the corner of your screen until you need to use it. You also have the option to drag and dock SnackR to the four corners of your screen.

snackr-feed-scroll

SnackR can be easily integrated with your existing Google Reader account. Just be careful on deleting feeds from SnackR for it will also delete them from your Google Reader database.

NOTE: if you enable Google Reader integration, and you delete a feed in Snackr, it will automatically be deleted in Google Reader as well (and if you add a feed in Snackr, it will get added to Reader too). We plan to make this optional in the future. (If you downloaded the previous 0.37 build, this build doesn’t have any new functionality, but makes the synchronization of feeds between Snackr and Google Reader clearer.)

There are also a few other features, such as the ability to post items to email, del.icious, digg, etc.–and a bunch of bug fixes.

Instead of going to your feed reader checking for updates, you can check them right on your desktop without opening your reader or scrolling your feed gadget installed in your system. If you’re not much of a feed reader kind of guy/gal, this is a cool way of discovering the power of RSS.

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Turn Your RSS Feeds into a Printable Magazine Style PDF

November 6th, 2008 | 8 Comments | Posted in Tips N Tricks

Tabbloid is a project of HP (Hewlett Packard) which offers a new way of delivering RSS feeds to readers. It will allow you to turn your favorite RSS feeds into a well designed printable PDF document. The produced document can be set to be delivered to you via email in a weekly, daily or hourly basis.

You can set up your own Tabbloid in just a few minutes. The service requires no signing up. All you need to do is add a few RSS feeds, place your email and set the frequency of the delivery. You can also select from their starting list of popular blogs/news sites.

This service is great for getting feeds emailed to you in the form of a single printable PDF. The feeds are delivered in full but you only get to have the text content. Videos and images are not included in the generated document. It won’t be of much use if you are going to use Tabbloid to subscribe to sites which heavily uses images (photo blogs) and videos for content.

Check out the sample PDF document below.

Favorite Blogs

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Beat the RSS Out of Any Web Page with FeedBeater

November 3rd, 2008 | 10 Comments | Posted in Tips N Tricks

Want to follow a certain web page only and not the entire site update? FeedBeater will beat the feeds out of those web pages. It can also be used to syndicate content changes on websites that do not offer RSS updates.

How it works

FeedBeater is powered by Diffbot, a syndication engine which monitors any URL for changes in content, then classifies and decodes the document’s structure.

By identifying new content, filtering out unimportant content (comment counters, ads, etc etc), clean and intelligent RSS feeds can be built from any URL.

All you need to do is paste the URL you want to syndicate and it will update you whenever a change is made on that page. This is great if you want to keep track of websites that are under construction or get updates from auction pages.

Tip: You can use their script which will allow users to syndicate any page on your website. There is also a bookmarklet available which makes the creation of RSS feed for any URL just a click away.

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