| Nov 03 |
Making an RSS FeedWhat Is RSS? How does RSS syndication work? Say you publish a new web page about a particular topic. You want others interested in that topic to know about it. By listing the page as an “item” in your RSS file, you can have the page appear in front of those who read information using RSS readers or “news aggregators” (explained more in my sidebar article, RSS: Your Gateway To News & Blog Content). RSS also allows people to easily add links to your content within their own web pages. Bloggers are a huge core audience that especially does this. What does RSS stand for? There’s a can of worms. RSS as introduced by Netscape in 1999 then later abandoned in 2001 stood for “Rich Site Summary.” Another version of RSS pioneered by UserLand Software stands for “Really Simple Syndication.” In yet another version, RSS stands for “RDF Site Summary.” History buffs might be interested that there’s been some rivalry over who invented RSS. This is why we have both different names and indeed different “flavors” or versions of RSS. Mark Pilgrim’s written an excellent article, What Is RSS, that charts the different versions with recommendations on which to use. I’ll also revisit the version choice you’ll need to make. But first, let’s look more closely at some basics of what goes into any RSS file. How Easy Is RSS? I’ve been exploring RSS because it was time that Search Engine Watch offered its own stories in this manner. I’ve read several tutorials about making a feed, and they generally suggest that it is easy. They often offer code that you can “cut-and-paste” and link over to specifications that I actually don’t find that clear. For example, the RSS 2.0 specification has an “cloud” element that’s optional but which a lay person might still wonder if they should use it. Meanwhile, heaven help the person who stumbles into the RSS 1.0 specification and its complicated RDF syntax. Sure, making an RSS file IS easy for many. If you understand HTML, you’ll probably understand enough to do a cut-and-paste from someone else’s RSS file to make your own file. Don’t know HTML? Start a blog, because several blogging tools automatically generates RSS files. As for those non-technical people using WYSIWYG page building tools or personal home page building systems, have faith. Even you can build an RSS file from scratch, as long as you dispense with some of the extra features you probably don’t need. We’ll go through how to do this below. Later, I’ll also mention some tools that will even do some or all of the work for you. The RSS File At the heart of an RSS file are “items.” No matter what version of RSS you settle on, your file will have to include at least one item. Items are generally web pages that you’d like others to link to. For example, let’s say you just created a web page reviewing a new cell phone that’s being released. Information about that page would form an item. To enter your item into the RSS file, you’ll need three bits of information: * Title * Description * Link The title and description of your item need not match exactly the HTML title tag of the web page that the item refers to, nor the meta description tag, assuming you use these (don’t know what they are? See my How To Use HTML Tags article). You can write any title and description that you think will describe the page. However, using your page’s title and meta description tag certainly makes it easy to copy and paste to build your RSS feed. In the case of our example page, let’s say this is the information we settle on to define it as an item: Nokia 3650 Combines Phone And Photos I’ve been playing with the new Nokia 3650. Finally, someone has got the combination of a cell phone with digital camera capabilities right! http://allgadgetsreviewed.com/nokia3650.html Now we have to surround that information with XML tags. These are similar to HTML tags, with the exception that unlike with HTML, there’s no set definition of XML tags. Anyone can make up a particular XML tag. Whether it is useful depends on the program that reads the resulting XML file. In the case of RSS feeds, they have their own unique set of XML tags that are defined. Use these correctly, and then anything that reads RSS will understand your information. Did that make your head spin? If so, don’t reread — just carry on to see how simple it is. First, open a text editor like Notepad. We’re going to build our RSS file using it. For your title, you need to start it with the tag, then follow this with the text of the title, then end with the tag. It looks like this: Nokia 3650 Combines Phone And Photos For your description, you do the same, starting out with the opening tag, then following with the actual description, then “closing” with the tag. Now you have this: Nokia 3650 Combines Phone And Photos I’ve been playing with the new Nokia 3650. Finally, someone has got the combination of a cell phone with digital camera capabilities right! Next, we add the link information, beginning with , following with the actual hyperlink, then closing with . That gives us this: Nokia 3650 Combines Phone And Photos I’ve been playing with the new Nokia 3650. Finally, someone has got the combination of a cell phone with digital camera capabilities right! http://allgadgetsreviewed.com/nokia3650.html Now there’s one more thing we need to do. We actually have to define all this information as forming a particular “item,” which we do using a special item tag. You place the opening item tag, at the top or start of all the information we’ve listed. You then place the closing item tag, , at the bottom or “end” of the item information. The finished product looks like this: Nokia 3650 Combines Phone And Photos I’ve been playing with the new Nokia 3650. Finally, someone has got the combination of a cell phone with digital camera capabilities right! http://allgadgetsreviewed.com/nokia3650.html Congratulations! You’ve now made your first item. There’s a bit more to do to finish our RSS file. First, what if we have other items we want to syndicate? Then we simply add more item elements, just as we did above. You can have up to 15 items. New items tend to be inserted at the top, with old items removed from the bottom, to make room for new stuff. With our example, let’s see how things look if we add two more items: Nokia 3650 Combines Phone And Photos I’ve been playing with the new Nokia 3650. Finally, someone has got the combination of a cell phone with digital camera capabilities right! http://allgadgetsreviewed.com/nokia3650.html Sanyo Tablet PC Amazes! I was dubious about the new Tablet PCs, but then I saw the latest from Sanyo. Wow, cool looks and it works! http://allgadgetsreviewed.com/sanyotablet.html Canon MegaTiny Digital Camera Too Small OK, there is a limit to just how small is too small. Canon’s MetaTiny, no larger than a quarter, simply is too little to use properly http://allgadgetsreviewed.com/metatiny.html Having defined items we want to distribute, we now have to define our site as a “channel.” You’ll use the same tags as with the items: title, description and link. However, this time the information will be about your entire site, rather than a particular page. That means our channel information would look like this: All Gadgets Reviewed If it’s a gadget, we review it. Learn what gadgets are hot and what’s not! http://allgadgetsreviewed.com Now, how does something reading our RSS file know that the information above is for our “channel” when it looks just like item information? Simple. As long as we don’t surround this information with an opening and closing tags, it won’t be seen as item information but rather as channel information. That gives us this : o get my own feed going. |
| Oct 07 |
Article marketing For Better SeoArticle marketing For Better Seo Article marketing is one single web submission that is perfect for your website regarding SEO. That is a fact. How many times visitors do visit to your website? 100s daily? If so then you must have to be in the top 10 results on Google for your targeted keyword as a minimum 1 of those your web pages. The huge bulk of people right gets nowhere, and so gives up earlier than giving them a more often possibility, only because they rely on the organic search engine listings for traffic. Even their blogs catch some few visitors – if they get any. If that is you, then there is better technique out of this, and an simple way to get masses of visitors without just relying on search engines. This method applies to the following forms of web page: * Squidoo lenses * Facebook pages * Myspace pages * Traditional website pages * Blogs * Hubpages * Flixya * Vox * Skyrock * Any other online web page that easily accessed through a URL or web address If you have a required need for visitors to any of these above mentioned pages that you run or individual, subsequently Article Marketing is your only reply. You can forget all search engine optimization technique and trying to get your web page seen on that other blogs or forums. You must write articles on those mentioned content . Website traffic is really simple to get using this article marketing technique. |