And if you publish a feed, make it automatically discoverable with the tag. I write all this in case anyone doesn’t know about this wonderful feature of RSS. For example, Jeremy Keith publishes a number of different feeds for the various types of content on his site .īecause of these tags, all of the feeds on are automatically discoverable by RSS clients. Note that your site can publish lots of different feeds. This allows RSS clients to find my sites’s feeds from any page. Personally, I put these tags in the source of every single page on my site. This is called feed autodiscovery and it works like this: Website owners can publish feed URLs in their site’s source HTML which allows RSS clients to automatically discover what they can subscribe to. There’s actually nothing magic about how these feed URLs are discovered by RSS clients. In cases where I do find a feed URL, I send them a quick message saying, “hey, did you know your feed URL isn’t being automatically discovered by RSS clients-but it can!?” In cases where I can’t find a feed URL, like a friendly RSS evangelist, I’ll lookup their contact info and send them a friendly message noting that there’s at least one person in the world looking to read their online writing via a feed. Sometimes I find a feed URL and sometimes I don’t. To find out which is the case, I then go to the person’s website in the browser and look for an RSS link somewhere in their UI. They have an RSS feed, it just can’t be found. How do I find a RSS feed on a website Click on the RSS Feed Reader button and select the Add New Feed option.However, sometimes a feed URL can’t be found automagically. I merely copy/paste their website URL into my RSS client and their feed gets picked up automagically. The easiest way to do that is add their website to my RSS reader. When I stumble on folks online whose writing I find interesting, I want to follow it.
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