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Tiêu đề Rss: The Missing Manual
Trường học University of Technology
Chuyên ngành Information Technology
Thể loại Tài liệu
Năm xuất bản 2023
Thành phố Hanoi
Định dạng
Số trang 5
Dung lượng 29,35 KB

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You use a program like Safari to "subscribe" to updates from such feeds, and then read any new articles or postings at your leisure.. And if you want to read a full article, you can clic

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20.2 RSS: The Missing Manual

In the beginning, the Internet was an informational Garden of Eden There were no

bannerads, pop-ups, flashy animations, or spam messages Back then, people thought the Internet was the greatest idea ever

Those days, unfortunately, are long gone Web browsing now entails a constant battle against intrusive advertising and annoying animations And with the proliferation of Web sites of every kind—from news sites to personal weblogs (blogs)—just reading your favorite sites can become a full-time job

Enter RSS, a technology that lets you subscribe to feeds—summary blurbs provided by thousands of sources around the world, from Reuters to Apple to your nerdy nextdoor neighbor You use a program like Safari to "subscribe" to updates from such feeds, and then read any new articles or postings at your leisure

The result: You spare yourself the tedium of checking for updates manually, plus you get

to read short summaries of new articles without ads and blinking animations And if you want to read a full article, you can click its link in the RSS feed to jump straight to the main Web site

Figure 20-9 The Length slider controls how much text appears for each RSS blurb;

if you drag it all the way to the left, you're left with nothing but headlines To change the number and order of the articles being displayed, use the search options

on the right And if you feel a sudden desire to tell your friends about an amazing RSS feed you've just discovered, use the "Mail Link to This Page" link in the

lower-right section of the window

Note: RSS either stands for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication Each

abbreviation explains one aspect of RSS—either its summarizing talent or its simplicity

20.2.1 Viewing an RSS Feed

So how do you sign up for these free, automatic RSS "broadcasts? "Watch your address bar as you're surfing the Web When you see a blue RSS button appear (identified back in Figure 20-1), Safari is telling you, "This site has an RSS feed available."

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To see what the fuss is all about, click that button Safari switches into RSS-viewing mode, as shown in Figure 20-9

At this point, you have two choices:

• Add the RSSfeed as a bookmark Use the Bookmarks Add Bookmark

command, and add the feed to your Bookmarks menu, Bookmarks bar, or Mail (Section 19.7) as you would any Web page From now on, you'll be able to see whether the RSS feed has had any new articles posted—without actually having to visit the site Figure 20-10 (top) has the details

• Close the RSS feed altogether To do so, just click the RSS button again You're

left back where you started, at whatever Web page you were visiting

20.2.2 RSS Tricks

RSS is a tremendously flexible and powerful technology, especially in Safari The fun never ends, as these tricks illustrate

20.2.2.1 Creating RSS summaries

If you create a new bookmark folder (Section 20.1.2.1) and fill it with RSS feeds, you can see the total number of new articles right next to the folder's name (Figure 20-10,

bottom) You might create a folder of Mac news feeds, for instance, so you know

whenever there's a important event in the Mac world

From then on, by clicking the folder's name (and opening its pop-up menu), you can see which feeds have new articles; they're the ones with numbers next to their names If you -click a bookmark folder's name—in either the Bookmarks bar or the Bookmarks menu—Safari shows you all the feeds, neatly collated into one big, easily digestible list for your perusing pleasure (If you're billing by the hour, you can also choose View All RSS Articles from the folder's pop-up menu to achieve the same effect.)

Tip: To make the merged list more useful, click New under the Sort By heading Now

Safari displays any new articles at the top of the list, regardless of what site they came from, so you don't have to hunt through the list for new articles yourself

20.2.2.2 The personal clipping service

The search box at the right of any RSS-viewing window works pretty much as you'd expect: It narrows down the list of articles to only those that contain your search terms

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But that's barely scratching the surface of the search field's power If you've adopted the feed-merging trick described above, the Search box can search several feeds at once— perfect, for example, if you want to see all the news from Mac sites that has to do with iTunes

Now how much would you pay? But get this—you can then save the search itself as a bookmark Use the Bookmark This Search link at the lower-right corner of the window Give the bookmark a name, choose where it should appear in Safari, and then click Add

You've just turned Safari into a high-tech personal clipping service With one click on your new bookmark, you can search all your favorite news sources simultaneously— the feeds you've selected—for the terms you want You've just saved yourself hours of daily searching—not to mention the expense of a real clipping service

Figure 20-10 Top: Want to specify when Safari should check for updates to your RSS bookmarks? In Safari Preferences, click RSS Turn on Bookmarks Bar and Bookmarks Menu (If you're an especially impatient person, select "Every 30

minutes" from the "Check for updates" pop-up menu.) Bottom: Next to your RSS feeds' names (in this screenshot, VersionTracker and Wired), a number tells you how many new articles are waiting for you If you have a bookmark folder containing several RSS feeds in it (here, Potato News), the number reflects the total number of new articles in that folder's feeds Never again will you

have to check a Web site for updates the old-fashioned way

Tip: If you find RSS feeds completely addictive in Safari, you'll love them in Mail—

where you can display them right in the program's window or have them land in your Inbox like regular messages Flip back to Section 19.7 if you skipped that chapter

20.2.2.3 The RSS screen saver

In System Preferences Desktop & Screen Saver Screen Saver tab, you'll find the RSS Visualizer screen saver, one of the most impressive displays of Mac OS X

technology you'll ever see When you click Options and select an RSS feed (and enable screen savers), you set up Mac OS X to get news from that feed whenever you're away from your Mac When the screen saver comes on, you're treated to a three-dimensional animation of the news from that site—along with astonished gazes from your co-workers

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If a news story grabs your interest, press the number key mentioned at the bottom of the screen The screen saver fades out, and Safari comes forward to display the associated article

Tip: But what if the feed you want isn't part of Safari's repertoire? No problem Add the

feed to your Safari bookmarks and relaunch System Preferences

20.2.2.4 Make feeds open automatically

It's easy enough to set up any favorite Web site as your home page, the page that opens automatically whenever you start Safari or create a new window It turns out, though, that you can also make an RSS feed—or a list of feeds—your home page Open the feeds you want, choose Safari Preferences, click General, and click Set to Current Page

In other words, suppose you start by opening a list of local, national, international,

business, and sports news feeds In that case, you've just made yourself a fantastic

imitation of newspaper headlines, but tailored to your interests with spectacular precision: The Francis J McQuaid Times (or whatever your name is)

Tip: If you've turned on tabbed browsing, you can Shift- -click headlines That makes the full articles open in background tabs while you continue to read the headlines

Articles in this Safari-newspaper arrangement are timelier than anything you could read

in print—and they're completely free If you miss a day of reading the headlines, no problem; the headlines stick around for days, and disappear only once you've read them And finally, when you're done reading, you don't have to worry about recycling your

"newspaper." No trees were harmed in the making of this publication

Welcome to the future of news: customized, free, up-to-date, and paperless

Tip: To find more RSS feeds, visit a site like www.feedster.com or www.syndic8.com, or

just watch for the appearance of the blue RSS button in the address bar.By the way,

Safari isn't the only RSS reader If you catch the RSS bug, you might want to try out a program like NetNewsWire (http://ranchero.com/netnewswire/), which offers many more power-user features

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