Google News Now Providing RSS and Atom Feeds 157
Avery writes "Several sites are reporting that Google has announced in their blog today that they will provide RSS and Atom feeds in their news section. Previously the only way to get RSS/Atom feeds from Google news was through third party scrapers. Now, you can get feeds for any of Google's news areas as well as feeds for a news search. (The news search is basically the same concept as Google news alerts, only in RSS.)"
It seems that Slashdot.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It seems that Slashdot.. (Score:1)
Re:It seems that Google does not cache all feeds (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:It seems that Slashdot.. (Score:2)
What is the point of RSS? (Score:5, Interesting)
It was originally touted as a low-bandwidth solution, but this in most cases is false. If 10,000 people subscribe to a sites' RSS feed and set their RSS aggregators to 'refresh' that feed every 5 mins or so, the bandwidth usage very quickly mounts up. Most sites use dyanamically created pages even for the feeds, so pre checking the age of the page doesn't help.
I installed an RSS reader on my PDA, I thought it would be great for offline news browsing, but I quickly found that I was crippled by most of the feeds because they at very least just showed the news titles, and at most showed only the first paragraph of the articles. If I wanted to read more, I had to go online. If I'm going online I might as well just browse the web normally.
I'm sure RSS has niche uses (such as the slashboxes here on
Just my 2p's worth.
-Jar.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Opening my rss agregator is just as easy as opening my web browser, only my browser gives me more information.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Still, RSS is overdoing it: even while it might be well suited to the task, the idea behind RSS is that you recive updated information about something as soon as it's avaliable while using as little bandwidth as possible. I've seen a lot of sites, like the op mentioned, that miss the point completely: either they deliver a lot of data through it or very brief headline-like updates, which
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:3, Informative)
Someone better tell Dave Winer! He needs to add a link portion to each channel item. It should be called an enclosure tag. And just to make thing easier on the aggregator, we'll include the MIME type, and number of bytes this other file will be!
What? They already are?! But Lisandro said that he doesn't think it'd catch on... Since 2001 you say? And that's the mechanism used by all podcasts.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Just curious, what's wrong with podcasts? Do you not like NPR's Science Friday with Ira Flatow? Or getting Battlestar Galactica episode commentaries for free?
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1)
Syndication. You do it for the same reason you use a TiVo to get new television content instead of a VCR. I don't want to manually check a page for new files and then manually download the new ones, just like I don't want to manually program a VCR and load a tape. I want a feed that iTunes can check for new content, then download said content for me and then update my iPod with the new content. Waking up to fresh content on my iPod in the morning versus spending an hour at work downloading files and updatin
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
I'm happy with AvantGo; it may not be perfect for content creators (since they have to pay for a channel), but as a user I get quite a nice bunch of information. Replaces a daily newspaper.
As for RSS feeds... it would be interesting to see the most recent/most searched queries on Google. And maybe the results (including pictures *g*).
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
AvantGo has LONG been surpassed by better, smaller, faster, more-capable, feature-rich, free tools.
Take a look at Plucker [plkr.org] for the current leader in this space. Runs on everything (Windows, Linux, OSX) and on PalmOS, PocketPC, Linux PDAs. Has Python, perl, Java, C++ distillers, dozens more options than AvantGo, lots
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:5, Informative)
Your bandwidth example is faulty. First of all, most people don't have their aggregators set to update every 5 minutes. Second, if you've ever ran a website that gets a decent amount of traffic, you'd know that content takes very little bandwidth compared to images and markup code. Third, a smart site operator would have a script set up that would create a static rss feed instead of a dynamic one, perhaps running it each minute. For a popular site, the processing savings would be significant.
PDA applications are a great example of RSS put to good use. Sure, you have to connect to read the full content, but the headlines are presented in a simple manner that even crappy PDAs can handle. Far better than downloading ALL of the content on a site, or requiring a constant connection to the Internet.
There's MANY niche environments that RSS feeds are perfectly suited for. They're easy to set up on a site. They're easy to use as a client. Why NOT have them around?
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
I do, and your wrong. Regardless, pulling data is fundamentally less efficient than pushing.
Third, a smart site operator would have a script set up that would create a static rss feed instead of a dynamic one, perhaps running it each minute.
I would imagine the smart site operator would just update the rss feed whenever the data is changed.
They're easy to set up on a site. They're easy to use as a client.
I'd say about that's the only reason fo
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2, Offtopic)
That's the part that really interests me, and I've been doing that in my new app, Bitty Browser [bitty.com].
If interested, try this:
1) go to http://www.bitty.com/editor [bitty.com]
2) Choose "RSS feed URL" (2nd in the scrolling list)
3) Enter http://slashdot.org/index.rss [slashdot.org] (that's Slashdot's RSS)
4) Enter Slashdot for the title
Then skip to the bottom and click Continue -- on the next page you'll see a preview embedded Bitty Browser with Slashdot. If you Continue again from there, you can c
Cool (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2, Informative)
Google has provided a feed, but the next step is to provide b>all the data in a structured format (either using RSS 2.0 extensions or more tags in Atom). The current feed is good, but only goes half-way.
Want to see what is possible with more structured data? Check out Serence's Google Kilp, which parses the HTML to give you the ability to choose language, topic, and pop-up alerts.
Google news Klip [klipfarm.com] (This is a Klip that in the KlipFolio
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:3, Interesting)
I installed it, selected a few feeds, and tried it out. What a waste! The program worked well enough, but the information content was so minimal, I was almost better off not knowing.
This lack of content wasn't MythNews' fault, of course, but content-free news seems to b
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2, Insightful)
The trick is finding sources that provide rich content. The feed for Slashdot includes the full post text, including the links to TFA. That way, I can hit up the news I want without being tempted to read comments and post replies (I save that for killing time at work, like, oh, now).
Another rich feed is that of the comic strip Goats [goats.com]. Unlike many strips, which only feed the comic title, or the fact that it has been posted
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
The whole goal of RSS is to get people who have a short attention span to become totally unproductive since they now have the RSS feed to break up the last bits on concentration they have. Complementary you can install chat software with annoying blinking icons to divide the attention between RSS and chat/messaging
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Actually, RSS has made me slightly more productive at work. Before, when I was feeling lazy, I would often take a break by refreshing a folder full of news sites and waiting for them to load. And then, ten minutes later, I might do it again - just in case something terribly exciting had happened while I wasn't looking. Now that I have feeds, I am notified when updates happen, and I can't keep reloading all the feeds I'm watching before the refresh interval is up because then I might get my IP banned from
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
This isn't a flashing thing. I don't have pop-ups or other intrusive notification mechanisms to tell me that the feed reader has a new update. It just does its stuff silently, and I have a look whenever I'm feeling bored. It's kind of like email.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:5, Informative)
I don't know what the "official point" of it is, but I have a great many uses for it. One main use I have is I have several feeds on my homepage [google.com] and I can at a glance see if they've updated and/or see if I might be interested in their update.
Another use for it is to open up one program and it will tell me if any blogs I read (and there are many that I do) have updated since I last checked. Instead of having to open up over 20 pages (most of which remain unupdated for months at a time), I just open up "one page".
Another use is I keep track of new e-books on this site [fictionwise.com] and I'll keep the items in my reader. Once a week or so, I go through all the items, delete most of them, keep the items for books that sound interesting*. That way whenever I want to buy a book, I can just open up my client and look through the items I've saved (which are obvious as they're unread).
* Actually I lie. I put the ones that sound interesting in a relational database. But you don't HAVE to do that, I'm just anal like that. Well, that and trying to keep track of my free e-books is very, very difficult.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
I find it very useful for keeping up with rarely updated Sourceforge projects as SF has feeds for all announcements done for a project. Web comics, news, entertainment, etc. Who wants to waste time going to web sites to see if they've updated? One look at your feed reader will show you what'
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:4, Informative)
Clik the orange blob in the bottom right, subscribe to the slashdot RSS feed, and drop it in your bookmarks (or on your toolbar). No need to visit slashdot to see if there's any interesting stories, as they'll be in your bookmarks.
I do the same with BBC News too, I can get an idea of what's happening by simply dropping down a list and checking the headlines. If a story grabs my attention I click it and go straight to the story - no need to navigate the horrendus news.bbc.co.uk site (fine for the top 5-10 stories, but after that it's easy to miss stuff)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:3, Insightful)
RSS is best for keeping track of 500 sites that only update their content sporadically, say every month or so. That way, instead of throwing it into your bookmarks and forgetting about it, or wasting your time checking it all the time when there's nothing new 29 days out of 30, you can file it away and only come back when there's something new. For that
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
As for the lameness of blogs, well, Slashdot is essentially just a blog with multiple authors and an assload of comments. Mreh, whatever.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1)
http://www.rsscache.com/ [rsscache.com]
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1)
How many websites do you visit on a regular basis? How many times have you visited them and not found anything new? Atom and RSS stop you wasting your time.
How many times have you visited a site and realised that it's been that long since you last visited it, you've missed quite a lot? Atom and RSS help you keep tabs on a large number of websites without having to visit them all the time. Atom and RSS make more efficient use of your time.
This isn't about saving bandwidth or being able to browse o
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Recently I bought a new Palm Pilot. I looked at AvantGo, but it doesn't support Linux. I installed plucker, but I still needed a source of information.
I wrote a short (10 line) script which grabs the RSS feed from abc.net.au, uses xslt to extract the links, loops through the links downloading each html file, installs them in plucker and runs pilot-xfer.
The whole thing takes about 20 seconds to run and gives me news to read on the tram in the morning when I go
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
I'm with you on this : Plucker is the way to go, and it can pull in regular HTML with small images : try finding the mobile content for PDAs which is HTML with small images and otherwise text only. For example the BBC PDA site [bbc.co.uk]. Works like a charm with Plucker, and no RSS parsing needed.
RSS is for syndication. Aggregators are useful for those kinds of people who like "My Yahoo!" and similar, and it looks like RSS will be the tech of choice for this kind of site in the future. That's the point of RSS, it's
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Probably depends on your PDA. I'm using a (rather old) m515 with Linux & J-Pilot. Get the client for the PDA from AvantGo [avantgo.com] (the last files contain the
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:4, Insightful)
I also use it to check if there are new items from Slashdot, PennyArcade and Megatokyo. The headlines are usually explicit enough to tell me if I want to go to the website or not, which saves me an important amount of time given that PennyArcade and MegaTokyo both take a while to download even on a corporate network.
Works for me. To me it's just a dynamic bookmark folder in Firefox, think of it like a news-ticker. I agree that RSS is not the second coming, just like "blogs" are just over-inflated home-pages. Although to hear the combatants of Atom V RSS (sometimes boiled down to one mega-corporation against one millionaire), you'd think that the lives of millions were at stake, particularly from the Atom camp. *sigh*
The interesting one is Slashdot. The feed from my work machine works. The feed to to my home machine worked a couple of times and has now stopped, in spite of the crap spouted on the Slashdot apology page on "why the Slashdot RSS feed isn't working for you". Maybe "they" only allow one nibble at a time?
The point is Syndication (Score:5, Insightful)
For example, you can label stories as Todo or Check later in your mailer (such as M2), you can integrate stories from different sources in one interface, you can search many feeds at one, you can display the news in many innovative ways, from a newspaper-like interface to tag clouds. You can choose how often to read the new stories and not have to endure complex archive navigation at each site.
If you are only getting your information from a few sources, one or two mailing lists and a few sites, you can just read your e-mail from inbox, bookmark the sites and check them manually. But if you want to know everything about foobar and aren't content simply with visiting only www.foobarnews.com, only RSS can help.
RSS can provide you with the same level of service that used to cost real money (thousands of 000) when it was provided by marketing companies under the name of media monitoring.
RSS is the shadow of the future power of Semantic Web already available in one particular area - news and new materials online. It's not intended for reading only, it's intended for processing and organising. With RSS you can automatically process all kinds of content, from slashdot articles, to search alerts to CNN news, to articles on rarely updated niche site, to del.icio.us links and flickr photos. You don't have to do it manually, your browser (RSS reader) and a bunch of web apps can do it for you.
If you really don't see why RSS is important, your opionion is not even worth 2p. You should have politely asked "please explain to me, why am I missing here", not offered your opinion, which was uninformed and stupid.
Re:The point is Syndication (Score:1)
It's a free world, and I'm allowed to offer my opinion according the the Universal Rules of Earth.
I'm surprised my comment has sparked such an active thread, but I have now learnt much about RSS that I had hitherto not considered. Many thanks to those that replied (including you).
My main opinion point still stands, RSS is _not_ the second coming, well not for me anyway.
-Jar.
Re:The point is Syndication (Score:2)
BTW, your post was OK, until you offered your opinion again.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1)
I never even thought of RSS being a solution for bandwidth usage.
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:1)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
RSS is not primarily intended for offline browsing[1]. It's a mechanism for notifying you when a page has changed.
I don't want to have to reload the huge group of news sites, blogs and other periodically updated pages that I find interesting in my browser every hour to see if anything has changed. It's a waste of time and a waste of bandwidth, since there's a good chance that half of them haven't been updated at any given time.
I recently set up a feed reader. Every now and then I go past the workspac
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
That depends on how smart the code that dynamically creates the RSS is. A sensible implementation will understand the "If-modified-since:" header, will perform a very cheap database request for items newer than that, and if there are no
The point is XML (Score:2, Interesting)
The advantage is that rss is r
I can tell you how I use it (Score:2)
My RSS reader (feedreader [sourceforge.net]) Is currently configured for 3-4 dozen different RSS feeds, some news sites, some home pages ("blogs"). Some of them are updated multiple times a day, some updated daily, some updated infrequently.
Really I don't have time to check all of them even once a day but with an RSS reader I just have to start and tell it to check all the feeds and I know where there is new stuff.
Then I can look at the subject lines and see what looks interesting, then I look at the summaries and then
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
A TRUE push technology would have made enormous sense. You update your website, your website automatically notifies aggregators such as Bloglines and search engines such as google that it has been updates, the big players talk among themselves and spread the word.
Instead the feed mechanism has turned into something that consumes more bandwidth than th eoriginal HTML ever did. The fact that you ar
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Bah humbug. I don't see the point of technology XYZ. Why can't we do it like we used to. When I was a boy we used simple web pages coded in HTML 1.0 by hand. And liked it!
I don't see many posters using RSS or things like del.ici.ous even though they are becomi
Re:What is the point of RSS? (Score:2)
Sure, it's not a perfect fix, but it's a nice start towards finding what I want to see.
Very cool (Score:4, Interesting)
This seemed like an easy and logical step for Google News. They've already got something similar for their blogspot service.
Check out their in-string wildcard searches, though. Cool!
Good thing (Score:3, Funny)
Well then, it seems having a refrigerator next to me will finally start paying off!
Wow! (Score:2, Funny)
The world has gone crazy, I kid you not!
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Google's Atom Feed (Score:5, Interesting)
Incidentally, does anyone know why the first entry in the Atom feed is always a link to the Google News front page?
Since the same information is in the feed's link, it's kind of superfluous. Is there some reason for this or is it just a mistake?
They appear to use NFE for the feeds. Is this a default in NFE?
The RSS feed does not appear to have this issue.
Re:Google's Atom Feed (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:Google's Atom Feed (Score:2)
--
Evan
Yahoo's had this for months now... (Score:5, Informative)
I can imagine the irony of reading google news on my.yahoo.com (too bad
Re:Yahoo's had this for months now... (Score:5, Interesting)
After using the Google and Yahoo RSS feeds side by side for a day, I'm definitely sticking with the Google one. There are a wider variety of sources, unlike Yahoo's content partners or whatever's going on there. Pretty pictures inside the feed help as well. What really put Google over th edge is that I can get my own customized feed that has the entertainment section stripped out, and more interesting stuff in it's place. Can My Yahoo do this? I'd never actually played around with it until just now. It'd probably be a better idea to integrate some of the customization features from My Yahoo into the main Yahoo News site so it's a bit more discoverable.
Re:Yahoo's had this for months now... (Score:2)
Re:Yahoo's had this for months now... (Score:1)
In case of Slashdotting (Score:4, Funny)
Advertising? (Score:3, Interesting)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/07/30/14 41249&tid=217&tid=95&tid=155 [slashdot.org]
But that would mean...
-Head Explodes-
So heres hoping they do it RIGHT!! (Score:4, Insightful)
1) No option to specify the number of results returned, returning to few results by default and putting a low cap on the max.
2) A feed but no "feed from search facility"
3) No pubDate information.
4) Feed intermitantly breaks because someone forgets to encode '&' or '' etc. in one or other fields.
5) Piling a **** load of HTML into the descripiton field (often leads to 4)
and theres more but those are the most annoying sins Ive seen recently.
Anyways this IS Google so I fully expect them to do it technically right...but I also fully expect them to limit the result set to 100 results - which is going to be useless to me and many others who might want RSS off google for more than just sticking into a aggregator!!
Re:So heres hoping they do it RIGHT!! (Score:2)
Re:So heres hoping they do it RIGHT!! (Score:2)
You can get RSS for just about any topic.
Some 1000+ RSS feeds. Just goto any Section for RSS its auto links.
Re:So heres hoping they do it RIGHT!! (Score:2)
Not working well yet (Score:2, Informative)
What? No link rel="alternate"? (Score:5, Interesting)
When I go to news.google.com [google.com], the page doesn't have a
element in the <head>. That means that browsers cannot automatically announce the existence of an RSS feed. It would be nice if I could use such a link to get an equivalent RSS/Atom feed that matches my customized news topic selection. (The RSS/Atom links on the left side of the page don't reflect my customizations.)
I'm a bit surprised at that, since Google has a reputation for making things as standard and user-friendly as possible. Perhaps that's why it's still Beta. (Where do I post feedback? Does Google have a crawler that indexes this gripe and reports it to their developers?)
Re:What? No link rel="alternate"? (Score:2)
So I suppose the Google News team would be the appropriate people to contact [google.com]about these things.
Looks great in Plucker! (Score:3, Interesting)
The new feeds [google.com] look GREAT in Plucker [plkr.org] on my PDA. I wrote a little web-based tool that takes any rss/rdf/atom/opml/nntp resource and converts it to validated HTML, which I can then directly manipulate (and in my case, turn into Plucker format).
You can see some screenshots [plkr.org] of what it looks like on my Palm.
Re:Looks great in Plucker! (Score:2)
Re:Looks great in Plucker! (Score:2)
Not yet.. I'm working on turning it out as a service of the new Plucker site, when/if we do another version launch.
Why is RSS HTTP? (Score:3, Interesting)
Couldn't this technology then be used to allow software updates etc as well as podcasts and news feeds?
In terms of a security risk, its only as bad as bittorrent. Sure somebody could modify their client to suck up the IPs of everyone that is interested in that information. Worse, somebody will probably figure out a way of adding a payload (although again, with proper hashing, and encryption that becomes increasingly difficult).
Could this be the killer app that gets us all hooked on IPv6?
Re:Why is RSS HTTP? (Score:1)
I know someone who is working on RSS/Bittorrent integration. Will mostly help podcasters save bandwidth...hold your breath.
Re:Why is RSS HTTP? (Score:2)
I too was disappointed to find you had to poll for RSS -- but when I gave it some thought, I accepted it. Polling is simple, a
Re:Why is RSS HTTP? (Score:2)
I think its advantage is it is very simple to impliment. The RSS feed is just an xml file on the webserver. No new technology is needed to set it up, no new protocols or software.
I think that is why it was caught on. Remember previous attempts at "push" technology on the web were supposed to be the next big thing, and never went anywhere becuase nobody set them up.
I'm not sure why IPv6 would have any impact. It's just more IP addresses available.
Re:Why is RSS HTTP? (Score:2)
Maybe it could be done if it was handled by a system similar to Skype. With the data transmitted via HTTP with you machine acting like a web server, updating a distributed registry every time your IP is updated?
Firewalls (Score:2)
If you want it to "push" data to your client, that's even worse because then you have to poke holes in firewalls to talk to each client, so these feeds will most likely not work behind any corporate firewall.
Re:Firewalls (Score:2)
I'm not saying your wrong, in fact I completely agree with you. I'm reminded of:
'When all you've got is a hammer, the whole world looks like a nail'
The current mentality seems to be, everybodys got a hammer, so make nails - we understand that some people like the idea of screws, but that will upset the people that make hammers. If your nails don't work use more nails, or make bigger nails. If that doesn't work we'll make a bigger hammer. No screws allowed.
Adding the Google Feed into Firefox (Score:3, Informative)
Google does not tell Firefox it has a feed, here is how to add it (ripped from the mozilla site):
Some sites don't tell Firefox that they support Live Bookmarks, even though they actually do. If you know the URL of a site's RSS feed (url ends with
Pablo
Bookmarks (Score:1)
Try a wget... (Score:2, Informative)
still not enough filters - for me (Score:2)
My problem was this: others did not allow filtering the way I wanted, so I created one, that allows url filtering
1.URL must/must not contain
2.Must contin at least one of these
3. AND at least ove of these
4. Can not contain any of these
While a bit afraid of being
please avoid "archive search" and note that it is a "hobby project" for me so it has
Yahoo News has it for months (Score:3, Interesting)
RSS Useless? (Score:2)
Depends on the content providers.
But if you're browsing with Mozilla/Firefox, check out Sage [mozdev.org]. I find it quite useful for floating over feeds from MarketWatch.com, Reuters, freshmeat.
Looking at how RSS works, though, I have to wonder why RFC 822 Mail Subject headers aren't fed into RSS as an option for gmail.
Re:Google Banned Once (Score:1)
Re:Google Banned Once (Score:1)
Re:Google personalized home (Score:1)
Re:Google News RSS and Firefox (Score:2, Informative)
It's because they haven't put the <link> elements in their HTML to enable autodiscovery. They'll probably add it soon.
Re:Google Moon! (Score:4, Funny)
Pixels?