I’m currently in Dean Shareski’s session on RSS. Dean is going to show us how to use RSS in a digital world. Dean and I have been communicating and sharing via blogging and discussions. We have discussed the use of the read/write web in creating new opportunities for students.
Dean began with a video on the Human Network. He explains the beginning of RSS – Real Simple Syndication – and the time when there were many different RSS readers. Dean does a good job of giving a technical description without being overwhelming.
Dean is giving a presentation on RSS – Real Simple Syndication – that will help people to build a RSS start. Dean begins the session giving a background on RSS. He begins by talking about how he began with RSS and the first uses of RSS with a number of different readers and how, over time, XML beame the standard format.
RSS allows you to subscribe to the different information sources – you pick what you want to see whether it be news or blogs or magazines.
Dean describes about how his RSS feeds are his research sources. He gets his information from the people who post and are on his RSS reader. It helps him to connect to other people. The RSS does not have spam unlike most email clients. In fact, you can narrow it down to a specific section of the information that you want. Blogs and newsites have RSS feeds, icons, that identify the page as one that can be used in a reader.
Dean then showed another video that gave a brief and simple explanation of RSS.
RSS is the next great tool in the spread of information and ultimately freedom: of expression, of communication, of information.
Ways of using RSS – Subscribe to people in your field. Find people who are working in your area and see what is happening and what they are doing. Dean then briefly described using social bookmarking and how it can help. He added some information about Technocrati and how it worked. Dean discussed how RSS can be used for updates flickr accounts, wikis, audio and video. In fact, you can subscribe to many just about anything that has a feed. You can also share your finds with other people using the share button. Another thing to do is to create an aggregated forum that collects RSS feeds for a particular topic or site like student blogs.
Dean moved on to describe how to get a RSS account. He highlighted GoogleReader and bloglines and what they do. From there Dean began an example of how to subsribe to a blog using RSS. He looked up an author and then began the process of subsribing to a blog using two different methods. First, using the subscribe to on the webpage. He then used the Subscribe to button on his browser.
Dean then did a search for a topic and demonstrated how to subscribe to a search in order to get information on a particular topic. H


2 responses so far ↓
It was a great presentation wasn’t it? I’ve just been using Aggregators like http://saskblogs.catprint.ca/ as my “RSS” reader to this point, but I think I’m going to give Google Reader a try after I quit using my Bloglines for anything. I’m also using CoComment which is like RSS for comments left on blogs.
I also use CoComment although I find that I sometimes forget to hit the CoComment button. I would suggest the GoogleReader. It is something I check two or three times a day.
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