I didn’t want to hijack this thread, so I thought it best to ask the question here:
According to Wikipedia,
OK, but what does it look like or how does it work? Do I get an email with new info, or a separate webpage with new info on it? How does it look and/or how does it work?
Also, any security risks to subscribing to an RSS feed?
You can get a standalone reader like this that you can use to view subscribed feeds. That type looks a lot like e-mail. People that run a website can embed an RSS feed into a page so that it updates with information from that feed.
I use Google Reader. You tell it what feeds you want to watch, and then when you log in it shows you which of those feeds have been updated, with links to them. If you have a Gmail account, you’ve got a Google Reader account (and if you don’t, you can get one for free).
I use RSS feeds right in Firefox for news sites like CNN and CBC. You bookmark the RSS feed (via the orange icon that shows up in the address bar) and then when you hover over the bookmark, it displays the feed. So instead of just going to CNN’s website, you get a list of the current top stories and you can just click on the ones you want to read. I haven’t found RSS to be much more useful than that so far.
That’s a good point; I guess for people who read lots and lots of news/blogs, it might be useful, but I usually just end up making the rounds and visiting all of my sites.
There are some nice uses, though; for instance, nytimes.com has a page for each individual NFL team (here is the one for my team, the Falcons); those pages have RSS feeds, so I can get any new Falcons-related developments pretty quickly that way.
To me, it seems like streaming stock quotes or sports scores you get while watching the news. If that appeals to you fine. But I usually don’t like the web streamed at me, so I don’t use it.
If the blog is updated less than once a day, the RSS reader will let you when the updates occur and save you visiting the blog when it hasn’t been changed. When you monitor a lot of blogs like this, the RSS reader really comes into its own
If the blog is updated more than once a day, the RSS reader will alert you to changes shortly after they happen.
If the blog is updated once a day or more but you only visit it once a day, you really don’t need its RSS feed. You could just continue your daily visits.