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The Old Value-Cost Conversation
1. They don't know how to set up an RSS feed
2. When they start to research setting up an RSS feed they see so many different products and ways to go about it that they get overwhelmed and leave it for another day (that never comes)
3. They don't even know if their blog can support having an RSS feed because they can't see any evidence of that.
1.) FeedBurner.com . Done.
2.) See #1.
3.) This is marginally trickier, but if you're using any modern blogging software and not some home-rolled or corporate-wonky blog software, you're probably RSS or ATOM enabled.
One easy way to tell is use Firefox. If you see that weird symbol at the right of the address bar when viewing your blog, then you've got a feed. Click it and it'll throw up a bookmark option. Right-click (or control click for Mac) and select Properties, and you'll see the feed address tucked in there.
I will personally hand-walk you through publishing an RSS feed if you don't find your answer through this reply.
Step 1.) Try the #3 trick above and look for the feed. If you're using ie, switch, THEN try.
Step 2.) Failing that, tell me which software you're using and point me towards your blog.
Step 3.) Check on FeedBurner.com for resources because they're in the business of helping you publish your RSS.
Step 4.) Call my cell.
:)
laura
When people subscribe to your feed you don't get a record of that. They don't send in their email address to you. You actually have no idea of how many subscribers you have.
93 people turned on their computer and fired up their aggregator to day and pinged your feed. Other than that, you don't really know.
I'm way up to nearly 300 people turning on the computer most days. Woooooo.
God I want better metrics.
It is funny that you would refer to my 101 feeds - 1 more than stated! ;-)
As we are now getting close to the start of the new semester at the university, I am now trying to get right under 70 feeds. It is a case of keeping enough mental bandwith to deal to the day to day work in term time.
Comments of your post have made me reflect on how knowledge about ICT issues is been propagated on the internet, not among "propeller heads", but among people who like myself have developped a keen interest, without being specialists by training.
I commonly describe myself as a dummy-eek (my very own home-made contraction of dummy and geek!)
Reading blogs together with cross-checking on Wikipedia is a great way to learn. This post and the comments are a great tribute to that.
70? That's uncivilized! : )