@audoeyopOct 29.2009 — #You should use Pulssr.com to handle everything RSS... creating, importing, embening an RSS feed onto your website... all of the above...
@opifexOct 29.2009 — #You should use Pulssr.com to handle everything RSS... creating, importing, embening an RSS feed onto your website... all of the above...[/QUOTE]
Have to disagree with this.... [B]you[/B] should be in control of [B]your[/B] RSS feed on your own server without having to rely on any third party.
RSSWriter is also another good option and there are lots more out there. Download a few and play with them to see which one suits your particular needs best.
@audoeyopOct 29.2009 — #Have to disagree with this.... [B]you[/B] should be in control of [B]your[/B] RSS feed on your own server without having to rely on any third party.
RSSWriter is also another good option and there are lots more out there. Download a few and play with them to see which one suits your particular needs best.[/QUOTE]
The way I look at it... Whether you use RSSWriter or Pulssr.com, you'll still have an RSS feed for your website. With Pulssr, your RSS feed will be part of a community of other RSS users... this is by default additional exposure that can draw people to your feed and your website.
Yeah, you can host your own feed, but it will sit on your site, and only be seen by people who have visited your site. With Pulssr, people who have similar interests to your RSS feed topics can be drawn to your website...
@savvykmsOct 29.2009 — #If you research RSS code, you can probably manage a PHP script that spiders your own server and sends off RSS content type with the needed RSS. RSS appears to be like XML or HTML.