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[1] annie's blog
[2]annie's blog
[3]👋 Hello! [4]✍️ Guestbook [5]👊 Blog [6]🫶 Micro
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How to do the RSS
This is a simple guide for people who are not super tech-oriented.
I like the recent [7]You should be using an RSS reader article thats being
shared.
And I think we need a simple little guide for people who might read that
article and think, Yeah. Good idea. I should do that.
And then they might think, Huh, how exactly do I do that, again?
RSS isnt complicated. But if youre not at all familiar with it, its not
easily apparent.
So heres a little guide to get started with RSS.
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The very short version
1. Sign up for an RSS reader. I use Feedbin. [8]Go sign up. You get a free
month, then its $5/month. Dont bitch about the price. Cancel something
you dont use, like that food tracking app or that one Substack you never
read.
2. Open a site you like to read. Look for RSS or Feeds in the menu or find the
RSS icon. Sometimes its in the footer. Sometimes its difficult to find.
An image with caption: The RSS icon. Might not be orange! The RSS icon.
Might not be orange!
3. Right click on the RSS icon or the RSS/Feed option, once you find it, and
copy the link.
4. Go back to Feedbin, click the +Add button in the bottom left, paste in the
link, and hit Enter.
5. Feedbin will pop up a little dialog with the feed title. Confirm you want
to add the feed by clicking the blue Add button.
Repeat steps 2 through 5 to add more sites and blogs and cool stuff to your
RSS reader.
Now for the longer version.
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What is RSS
RSS is your own personal feed of cool stuff from the Internet made by cool
people you want to hear from.
Its a little bit like what Facebook was when it started, although it came long
before social media.
We could call it the original social media. In fact, I think we will. From now
on. I will, anyway. You do what you want.
Anyhow, social media was useful and cool at first because you got to connect
with people you knew in real life or found interesting and then their stuff
would show up in your timeline, and you could see everybodys stuff all in one
handy feed.
Social media has become such an ad-congested, algorithmed experience that its
pretty much useless if you want to actually see the stuff made and shared by
the people you actually care about.
Which brings us back to RSS.
RSS lets you build your own little Internet feed. You add the people you like
and you get a continually automatically updated stream of things youre
interested in from people you want to hear from. No ads or interventions or
intrusions or extraneous junk that doesnt belong there.
How to set up RSS
First up, you need an RSS reader. There are so many. Free ones and paid ones,
old ones and new ones. Of course nothing else will ever come close to the
original* and the best, my one true love, Google Reader, which honestly wasnt
that special but it holds a special place in my heart. Miss you, baby.
Anyway there are lots. But you dont need lots. You need just one.
Step 1: Sign up for an RSS reader.
There are many options. They are all basically the same, honestly. Dont
overthink it. You can switch this up later if you want.
Go read [9]this article and pick one of the options, then sign up for one.
Are you mad that you might have to pay a small subscription fee? Dont be. Be
glad. Paying for something means youre the consumer, not the product. On
Facebook, etc., youre the product being sold to advertisers, so you dont have
to pay.
Also, get real. Its like, $5 to $10 a month. You can do this. I believe in
you.
Step 2: Add feeds to your reader.
There are two ways to do this.
First: Search for the people/sites/blogs in your RSS reader of choice. Look for
the Add/find/subscribe option somewhere in your reader. Most modern readers
have some sort of functionality to sniff out the RSS feeds for you. Try it. See
what you can find.
Second: Open the sites and blogs you want to read and look for their RSS feeds.
Some sites make it really easy to find and some dont. Some sites have multiple
feeds to choose from.
Step 3: Get the app for your RSS reader of choice.
Because lets be real, youre mostly going to read these on your phone. Which
is fine.
Step 4: Repeat step 2 anytime you discover a new site/blog/person you like and
want to follow.
Thats it. You create a customized feed of your own choosing, with the things
you like and the people who are interesting to you, and you can read them at
your leisure, and they wont get buried in the timeline by the algorithm.
Theyll be there when you want them. And you can remove any that get boring.
Youre in control.
By the way, heres [10]my RSS feed.
Okay, go do it! Get to RSSing!
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*Dont @ me with your timelines and argumentation about why it isnt the real
original, I dont care.
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Published October 17, 2024
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Subscribe via RSS
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References:
[1] https://anniemueller.com/
[2] https://anniemueller.com/
[3] https://annie.omg.lol/
[4] https://anniemueller.com/guestbook
[5] https://anniemueller.com/posts
[6] https://annie.micro.blog/
[7] https://pluralistic.net/2024/10/16/keep-it-really-simple-stupid/#read-receipts-are-you-kidding-me-seriously-fuck-that-noise
[8] https://feedbin.com/
[9] https://www.wired.com/story/best-rss-feed-readers/
[10] https://anniemueller.com/posts_feed
[11] https://anniemueller.com/posts_feed
[12] https://anniemueller.com/posts
[13] https://pika.page/?utm_source=pika_blog&utm_medium=pika_footer_branding