Question:
what is rss feed submission?
Ankit Kumar
2012-09-08 04:27:57 UTC
what is rss feed? How it is useful in seo? And how to do id?
Four answers:
Prashant
2012-09-08 08:00:45 UTC
RSS Rich Site Summary is a family of web feed formats used to publish frequently updated works—such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video—in a standardized format.An RSS document includes full or summarized text, plus metadata such as publishing dates and authorship.

RSS feeds benefit publishers by letting them syndicate content automatically. A standardized XML file format allows the information to be published once and viewed by many different programs. They benefit readers who want to subscribe to timely updates from favorite websites or to aggregate feeds from many sites into one place.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RSS
mukesh
2012-09-10 03:06:18 UTC
It's simple an effective way to add fresh content on your site. If RSS feeds present to your sites, your site will get updated automatically with headlines and snippets of new content from your RSS site sources.



you can use free RSS creates website to create your website RSS...
Tuhin
2012-09-08 04:31:45 UTC
RSS (Really Simple Syndication) is a family of web feed formats used to publish frequently updated works—such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video—in a standardized format.

An RSS document which is called a "feed", "web feed" or "channel" includes full or summarized text, plus metadata such as publishing dates and authorship.

RSS stands for different things. RSS is a way of showing content (news, pictures, mp3s) without having to go to different web addresses to get it. Say you want to read the news at CNN, foxnews and read some comics. normally you would go to the sites and have all the ads and junk pop-up, but you just want the news! Enter RSS. Using programs known as "aggregators", you can see many "feeds" at the same time.



more info:

http://www.whatisrss.com/



aggregator i use:

http://www.rssowl.org/



nice feeds:

CNN -http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_topstories.rss

foxnews - http://www.foxnews.com/xmlfeed/rss/0,4313,0,00.rss

many comics - http://darkgate.net/comic/feed.php?adamhome&bc&beetlebailey&bizarro&blondie&bornloser&calvin&catswithhands&closetohome&dennisthemenace&dilbert&frankandernest&garfield&getfuzzy&gpf&hagar&heathcliff&mothergooseandgrimm&nonseq&pcnp&pickles&stonesoup&wizardofid&ziggy&zits



Hope his helps :)
Avishek
2012-09-12 04:08:37 UTC
RSS Rich Site Summary (originally RDF Site Summary, often dubbed Really Simple Syndication) is a family of web feed formats used to publish frequently updated works—such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video—in a standardized format.[2] An RSS document (which is called a "feed", "web feed",[3] or "channel") includes full or summarized text, plus metadata such as publishing dates and authorship.

RSS feeds benefit publishers by letting them syndicate content automatically. A standardized XML file format allows the information to be published once and viewed by many different programs. They benefit readers who want to subscribe to timely updates from favorite websites or to aggregate feeds from many sites into one place.

RSS feeds can be read using software called an "RSS reader", "feed reader", or "aggregator", which can be web-based, desktop-based, or mobile-device-based. The user subscribes to a feed by entering into the reader the feed's URI or by clicking a feed icon in a web browser that initiates the subscription process. The RSS reader checks the user's subscribed feeds regularly for new work, downloads any updates that it finds, and provides a user interface to monitor and read the feeds. RSS allows users to avoid manually inspecting all of the websites they are interested in, and instead subscribe to websites such that all new content is pushed onto their browsers when it becomes available.



The RSS formats were preceded by several attempts at web syndication that did not achieve widespread popularity. The basic idea of restructuring information about websites goes back to as early as 1995, when Ramanathan V. Guha and others in Apple Computer's Advanced Technology Group developed the Meta Content Framework.[4]

RDF Site Summary, the first version of RSS, was created by Dan Libby and Ramanathan V. Guha at Netscape. It was released in March 1999 for use on the My.Netscape.Com portal. This version became known as RSS 0.9.[5] In July 1999, Dan Libby of Netscape produced a new version, RSS 0.91,[2] which simplified the format by removing RDF elements and incorporating elements from Dave Winer's scriptingNews syndication format.[6] Libby also renamed format from RDF to RSS Rich Site Summary and outlined further development of the format in a "futures document".[7]

This would be Netscape's last participation in RSS development for eight years. As RSS was being embraced by web publishers who wanted their feeds to be used on My.Netscape.Com and other early RSS portals, Netscape dropped RSS support from My.Netscape.Com in April 2001 during new owner AOL's restructuring of the company, also removing documentation and tools that supported the format.[8]

Two entities emerged to fill the void, with neither Netscape's help nor approval: The RSS-DEV Working Group and Dave Winer, whose UserLand Software had published some of the first publishing tools outside of Netscape that could read and write RSS.

Winer published a modified version of the RSS 0.91 specification on the UserLand website, covering how it was being used in his company's products, and claimed copyright to the document.[9] A few months later, UserLand filed a U.S. trademark registration for RSS, but failed to respond to a USPTO trademark examiner's request and the request was rejected in December 2001.[10]

The RSS-DEV Working Group, a project whose members included Guha and representatives of O'Reilly Media and Moreover, produced RSS 1.0 in December 2000.[11] This new version, which reclaimed the name RDF Site Summary from RSS 0.9, reintroduced support for RDF and added XML namespaces support, adopting elements from standard metadata vocabularies such as Dublin Core.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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