Resources is an RSS aggregator. RSS feeds are chronologically ordered abstractions of website content that allow you to keep track of new material from a central location. In practice this means you can subscribe to the RSS feeds of weblogs you are interested in, and receive automatic notification of new posts. Most feed readers, including this one, allow you to read an aggregated view of all the content you have subscribed to.
To subscribe to an RSS feed, you need to know its URL. Then, perform the following steps:
The system will acknowledge your subscription request and automatically fetch new content.
You can now keep up-to-date on all your RSS feeds by clicking on the 'View aggregator' submenu option.
The 'feeds' submenu option provides a list of all the RSS content you have subscribed to, and 'popular feeds' displays the most popular subscriptions in the system (a great way to quickly see which feeds are popular).
Subscribed feeds don't have to come from outside SciSpace.net; SciSpace.net provides RSS feeds for user activity, weblog posts and file uploads; it's easy to keep track of a user's file additions, for example, simply by subscribing to their files RSS feed.
User RSS feeds are linked to in three places:
SciSpace.net also provides RSS feeds for tag-based searches, either per-user or throughout the system. This means that you could subscribe solely to files uploaded by a particular user with a particular tag, or files uploaded by everyone marked with the same tag. The system-wide tag-based RSS feeds also let you keep track of users or communities that list particular tags in their profile fields.
Note: RSS feeds just list content which is marked as public.
Highlighting your content from other services (and importing from other blogging tools)
If your external subscriptions are your own content, you can post any new items from your feeds to your main blog. When the RSS feed is brought into SciSpace.net and published to your blog, content will appear the next time you update the source. This functionality allows you to maintain your blog elsewhere and have the content posted within your SciSpace.net community.
To do this:
iframe, 15-Oct-2007 14:26 (GMT)