austraLasia 1121
austraLasia adopts RSS (Real Salesian
Syndication)
ANYWHERE: 2nd May 2005 -- austraLasia goes
RSS. The acronym has several likely origins, the best known of which is
that it stands for Real(ly) Simple Syndication. Not a difficult acronym to
adapt ever so slightly to a Salesian context - and austraLasia has done
it.
The ultimate difference between RSS and say, email, is
significant. It is the difference between 'push' and 'pull', to begin
with. The receiver becomes an active receiver. RSS looks like email
but isn't. It avoids all the problems of email, like viruses, multiple
mailings (!) and the like. It works like a web browser, which it is.
The receiver, with an RSS reader, sometimes called a 'Feed Reader' to receive
RSS 'feeds', receives any update to news or web pages to which he or she
'subscribes'. The latter only means clicking an icon, not paying
something. The RSS Reader is likewise free, takes less than five minutes
to download and install. Some RSS readers may require you to also install
.NET Framework 1.1 which is also free - another five minutes work!
Most major news agencies and associated web
sites the world over now have RSS feeds. Go to a site, for example
the FIDES Catholic agency site
www.fides.org
. Pick your language and on the page, down right, you will see a
small orange rectangle with either RSS or XML written on it. That simply
links to a page telling you that FIDES offers RSS feeds in six languages.
The RSS file usually ends in either .xml or .rss: they mean the same thing for
all practical purposes. But open your RSS Reader and put the site's usual
address (URL) in there and it goes looking for the .xml file for you.
Subscribe and your reader will pick up any changes that ever occur in news or on
the page for you. 'They', whoever they are, no longer need to send the
changes or the news to you.
It really is that simple, and for the technically
minded, it requires about 10 lines of additional code and 'basta' as they say in
some parts, to make RSS functional on one's web page.
The austraLasia page within Bosconet has gone RSS.
Soon the other pages will go RSS. To simplify the process, put the URL in
the RSS feedreader as
www.bosconet.aust.com/rssala.xml
and you're away. Don't forget to subscribe. Let me know when you've
done that and I'll 'park' your email address for archival interest only or to
advise you of likely developments in Salesian technology!
By the way, if you click on
the above hyperlink outside of the RSS reader it will open, but some
not-so-friendly code will make reading the real stuff difficult. At least
you can see how it differs only fractionally from normal html, if that sort of
thing should interest you.
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