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Finds RSS or Atom feeds on a website for the terms you search for. To find RSS or Atom feeds about football, type feed:football. hasfeed: Finds webpages that contain an RSS or Atom feed on a website for the terms you search for. To find webpages on the New York Times website that contain RSS or Atom feeds, type site:www.nytimes.com hasfeed ...
RSS feed data is presented to users using software called a news aggregator and the passing of content is called web syndication. Users subscribe to feeds either by entering a feed's URI into the reader or by clicking on the browser's feed icon. The RSS reader checks the user's feeds regularly for new information and can automatically download ...
The visitor's RSS feed activity can then be tracked accurately using standard web analytics applications. The problem with this method is that if the feed is syndicated by a search engine for instance then this will defeat the purpose of the unique URLs as many people could potentially view the RSS feed via a single URL.
The AOL.com video experience serves up the best video content from AOL and around the web, curating informative and entertaining snackable videos.
Enclosures provide the URL of a file associated with an entry, such as an MP3 file to a music recommendation or a photo to a diary entry. Unlike e-mail attachments, enclosures are merely hyperlinks to files. The actual file data is not embedded into the feed (unless a data URL is used).
RSS feeds lets you subscribe to specific webpages, blogs, news headlines and more. Once you've subscribed to an RSS feed, updated info from the feed automatically downloads to your computer so that you can view updates in an easy-to-read format later on.
AOL latest headlines, news articles on business, entertainment, health and world events.
Media RSS (MRSS) is an RSS extension that adds several enhancements to RSS enclosures, and is used for syndicating multimedia files (audio, video, image) in RSS feeds. [1] It was originally designed by Yahoo! and the Media RSS community in 2004, but in 2009 its development has been moved to the RSS Advisory Board. [2]