Subscribing to OPML — get that RSS rolling

It’s all hap­pen­ing at Dawe Winer’s. The Who sub­scribes to my feed thing is a nice idea, more pow­er­ful, though, is the idea of sub­scrib­ing to OPML files.

Imag­ine Jenny the Librar­ian man­ag­ing a set of librar­ian feeds for pro­gram­mers. Or Tae­gan God­dard keep­ing a set of polit­i­cal feeds for peo­ple who want to watch all the cam­paigns. Script­ing News: 1/8/2004

I’m still wait­ing for the big RSS rev­o­lu­tion. Last year I started preach­ing a bit, but didn’t really put enough of an effort into it. That’s gotta change. RSS is pow­er­ful and for all of us using it, nearly impos­si­ble not to have. To a point where I don’t really read sites with­out them. In the last cou­ple of days I’ve found quite a lot of really inter­est­ing blogs … that I already know I’ll for­get in a day or two. Which is a shame.

What we need is feeds on all the blog­ging tools, some sort of stan­dard help text on those stu­pid, orange XML but­tons which con­tinue to puz­zle non-techies and a cen­tral (or at least just rea­son­able) “What is an aggre­ga­tor and where can I find one” page (I know of a few, but we still all need to make some use of them). And maybe the styling of the XML-files them­selves so that they don’t come up as com­ple gib­ber­ish would be an idea to implement.

All this just to say, that for RSS and OPML to become truly use­ful, we need to get every­one to use it. Email wouldn’t be fun either, if only the techies had access. Sub­scrib­ing to trusted people’s OPML is hard to explain when RSS, aggre­ga­tors etc. have to be intro­duced at the same time. RSS preach­ers, any suggestions?

Pollas.dk. URL.

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