Domain: feedburner.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to feedburner.com.
Comments · 148
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Some people use the proper tool for the job
No. I use RSS feeds into live bookmarks straight to my browser's bookmark toolbar. I have done this for years, it's a wonderful technology you can use with virtually all news sites, and you can then easily pick and choose the articles you want from updated drop down folders on your toolbar.
- BBC World News: http://news.bbc.co.uk/rss/news...
- CBC World News: http://rss.cbc.ca/lineup/world...
- CBC Canadian News: http://rss.cbc.ca/lineup/canad...
- Globe & Mail World News: http://feeds.feedburner.com/Th...
- CNN World News: http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_wor...
- CNN US News: http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_us....
For Mozilla or (better yet) PaleMoon browsers you just click on the link above, then on the resultant page click Subscribe Now into Live Bookmarks. I suspect Chrome is similar. This will buy you automatically updated headlines from multiple respected news outlets with different viewpoints in dropdown menus. Why anyone would use Facebook for news is beyond me. If you ask me, anyone who does go to Facebook for news deserves what they get. Facebook is a sewer of trolls initiating social malware for the kick it gives them to see their garbage repeated. Go to news sources for news. Go to facebook to try and make yourself feel better about how well liked you are.
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Oddly Specific
Not for everyone, but gotta love it when Gibbon is only a subset.
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Comedy
Check out The Greatest Generation at http://feeds.feedburner.com/Th... for some Trek TNG humor.
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Re:Size does matter.
How about 24"?
Check out this episode from the CNET First Look series, for a 24" Android all in one!! Sure, not really what you're asking for.. but I think it's funny. (It is a touch screen big Android screen!)
From:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/cnet/firstlookhdFirst Look: The Acer DA241HL is an all-in-one PC that runs Android 1:37 9/4/13
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some RSS feeds:
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some RSS feeds:
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some RSS feeds:
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Podcast advocate
I use Google Reader to gather data from any rss feed of interest and also download weekly about 60 podcasts from various sources each week using the Feedreader aggregator. I have to plug, in particular, podcasts (or videocasts) from This Week in Virology, This Week in Parasitism, and This Week in Microbiology, all available via a starting point of www.twiv.tv . (If you think Parasitism is not interesting, listen to TWIP 22.) The Naked Scientist based in Britain offers a nice weekly collection of news gathered from that area. The Australian Broadcasting Network at www.abc.net.au/radio/ offers podcasts about technology oriented towards that part of the world. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp and the BBC also offer podcasts which include new developments in all areas, but don't allow you to specialize in one area, such as medicine or computers. Futures in Biotech ( http://twit.tv/FIB ) has produced some terrific interviews in that area and Leo Laporte and his This Week in Technology does a few podcasts that offer more than his usual troubleshooting genre. http://www.podnutz.com/ is strictly computers, but three podcasts in particular are of interest as trendsetting. They are 274, 302 and 316. They deal with the development and growth of Lisa Hendrickson's career. She's a female computer troubleshooter who is rapidly building a large business that repairs computers remotely and worth watching and learning from as an example of how to grow a new business in the US. The Howard Hughes Medical Institute produces podcasts and videocasts about advancing technology Do a search for NIH Videocasts for presentations by this organization. Econtalk may not be strictly technical, but has outstanding interviews about developments and history that disproves that idea that economics are dry and boring. I've been saving a list of Best Podcasts for over a year and they number now about 90, but amount to over 2GB, so are not readily posted. I also have the addresses of podcasts that are plugged into the Feedreader aggregator that I'll try to add here in case that's of interest if the moderator agrees to include them. Several of these were worth noting, too, like NY Times Tech Talk and RadioLab: http://rss.conversationsnetwork.org/ppq/56641.xml http://podcast.seti.org/index.xml http://www.rtve.es/podcast/radio-5/asunto-del-dia-en-r5/SASUNTO.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/booksandideaspodcast http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/clickon/rss.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/Cyberspeak http://feeds.feedburner.com/diffusionradio http://www.econlib.org/library/EconTalk.xml http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast.php?id=510030 http://feeds.feedburner.com/GlobalChallenges http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/healthc/rss.xml http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/HHMI_Lectures.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laneur.xml http://www.materialstoday.com/rss/podcasts/ http://www.nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/nyt/podcasts/techtalk.xml http://dow
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Podcast advocate
I use Google Reader to gather data from any rss feed of interest and also download weekly about 60 podcasts from various sources each week using the Feedreader aggregator. I have to plug, in particular, podcasts (or videocasts) from This Week in Virology, This Week in Parasitism, and This Week in Microbiology, all available via a starting point of www.twiv.tv . (If you think Parasitism is not interesting, listen to TWIP 22.) The Naked Scientist based in Britain offers a nice weekly collection of news gathered from that area. The Australian Broadcasting Network at www.abc.net.au/radio/ offers podcasts about technology oriented towards that part of the world. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp and the BBC also offer podcasts which include new developments in all areas, but don't allow you to specialize in one area, such as medicine or computers. Futures in Biotech ( http://twit.tv/FIB ) has produced some terrific interviews in that area and Leo Laporte and his This Week in Technology does a few podcasts that offer more than his usual troubleshooting genre. http://www.podnutz.com/ is strictly computers, but three podcasts in particular are of interest as trendsetting. They are 274, 302 and 316. They deal with the development and growth of Lisa Hendrickson's career. She's a female computer troubleshooter who is rapidly building a large business that repairs computers remotely and worth watching and learning from as an example of how to grow a new business in the US. The Howard Hughes Medical Institute produces podcasts and videocasts about advancing technology Do a search for NIH Videocasts for presentations by this organization. Econtalk may not be strictly technical, but has outstanding interviews about developments and history that disproves that idea that economics are dry and boring. I've been saving a list of Best Podcasts for over a year and they number now about 90, but amount to over 2GB, so are not readily posted. I also have the addresses of podcasts that are plugged into the Feedreader aggregator that I'll try to add here in case that's of interest if the moderator agrees to include them. Several of these were worth noting, too, like NY Times Tech Talk and RadioLab: http://rss.conversationsnetwork.org/ppq/56641.xml http://podcast.seti.org/index.xml http://www.rtve.es/podcast/radio-5/asunto-del-dia-en-r5/SASUNTO.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/booksandideaspodcast http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/clickon/rss.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/Cyberspeak http://feeds.feedburner.com/diffusionradio http://www.econlib.org/library/EconTalk.xml http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast.php?id=510030 http://feeds.feedburner.com/GlobalChallenges http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/healthc/rss.xml http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/HHMI_Lectures.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laneur.xml http://www.materialstoday.com/rss/podcasts/ http://www.nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/nyt/podcasts/techtalk.xml http://dow
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Podcast advocate
I use Google Reader to gather data from any rss feed of interest and also download weekly about 60 podcasts from various sources each week using the Feedreader aggregator. I have to plug, in particular, podcasts (or videocasts) from This Week in Virology, This Week in Parasitism, and This Week in Microbiology, all available via a starting point of www.twiv.tv . (If you think Parasitism is not interesting, listen to TWIP 22.) The Naked Scientist based in Britain offers a nice weekly collection of news gathered from that area. The Australian Broadcasting Network at www.abc.net.au/radio/ offers podcasts about technology oriented towards that part of the world. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp and the BBC also offer podcasts which include new developments in all areas, but don't allow you to specialize in one area, such as medicine or computers. Futures in Biotech ( http://twit.tv/FIB ) has produced some terrific interviews in that area and Leo Laporte and his This Week in Technology does a few podcasts that offer more than his usual troubleshooting genre. http://www.podnutz.com/ is strictly computers, but three podcasts in particular are of interest as trendsetting. They are 274, 302 and 316. They deal with the development and growth of Lisa Hendrickson's career. She's a female computer troubleshooter who is rapidly building a large business that repairs computers remotely and worth watching and learning from as an example of how to grow a new business in the US. The Howard Hughes Medical Institute produces podcasts and videocasts about advancing technology Do a search for NIH Videocasts for presentations by this organization. Econtalk may not be strictly technical, but has outstanding interviews about developments and history that disproves that idea that economics are dry and boring. I've been saving a list of Best Podcasts for over a year and they number now about 90, but amount to over 2GB, so are not readily posted. I also have the addresses of podcasts that are plugged into the Feedreader aggregator that I'll try to add here in case that's of interest if the moderator agrees to include them. Several of these were worth noting, too, like NY Times Tech Talk and RadioLab: http://rss.conversationsnetwork.org/ppq/56641.xml http://podcast.seti.org/index.xml http://www.rtve.es/podcast/radio-5/asunto-del-dia-en-r5/SASUNTO.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/booksandideaspodcast http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/clickon/rss.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/Cyberspeak http://feeds.feedburner.com/diffusionradio http://www.econlib.org/library/EconTalk.xml http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast.php?id=510030 http://feeds.feedburner.com/GlobalChallenges http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/healthc/rss.xml http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/HHMI_Lectures.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laneur.xml http://www.materialstoday.com/rss/podcasts/ http://www.nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/nyt/podcasts/techtalk.xml http://dow
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Podcast advocate
I use Google Reader to gather data from any rss feed of interest and also download weekly about 60 podcasts from various sources each week using the Feedreader aggregator. I have to plug, in particular, podcasts (or videocasts) from This Week in Virology, This Week in Parasitism, and This Week in Microbiology, all available via a starting point of www.twiv.tv . (If you think Parasitism is not interesting, listen to TWIP 22.) The Naked Scientist based in Britain offers a nice weekly collection of news gathered from that area. The Australian Broadcasting Network at www.abc.net.au/radio/ offers podcasts about technology oriented towards that part of the world. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp and the BBC also offer podcasts which include new developments in all areas, but don't allow you to specialize in one area, such as medicine or computers. Futures in Biotech ( http://twit.tv/FIB ) has produced some terrific interviews in that area and Leo Laporte and his This Week in Technology does a few podcasts that offer more than his usual troubleshooting genre. http://www.podnutz.com/ is strictly computers, but three podcasts in particular are of interest as trendsetting. They are 274, 302 and 316. They deal with the development and growth of Lisa Hendrickson's career. She's a female computer troubleshooter who is rapidly building a large business that repairs computers remotely and worth watching and learning from as an example of how to grow a new business in the US. The Howard Hughes Medical Institute produces podcasts and videocasts about advancing technology Do a search for NIH Videocasts for presentations by this organization. Econtalk may not be strictly technical, but has outstanding interviews about developments and history that disproves that idea that economics are dry and boring. I've been saving a list of Best Podcasts for over a year and they number now about 90, but amount to over 2GB, so are not readily posted. I also have the addresses of podcasts that are plugged into the Feedreader aggregator that I'll try to add here in case that's of interest if the moderator agrees to include them. Several of these were worth noting, too, like NY Times Tech Talk and RadioLab: http://rss.conversationsnetwork.org/ppq/56641.xml http://podcast.seti.org/index.xml http://www.rtve.es/podcast/radio-5/asunto-del-dia-en-r5/SASUNTO.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/booksandideaspodcast http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/clickon/rss.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/Cyberspeak http://feeds.feedburner.com/diffusionradio http://www.econlib.org/library/EconTalk.xml http://www.npr.org/rss/podcast.php?id=510030 http://feeds.feedburner.com/GlobalChallenges http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/healthc/rss.xml http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/HHMI_Lectures.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laneur.xml http://www.materialstoday.com/rss/podcasts/ http://www.nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/nyt/podcasts/techtalk.xml http://dow
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Agreed
But what is the rest of the coverage besides recycled PR anyway? Personally I just try and get a sense of a game I'm interested in and then stop looking at coverage on it. I just want to see the basic idea of the game and what mechanics it uses, as soon as I'm interested then I cut off coverage because I don't want anything spoiled, not even the introduction. In other media I also avoid trailers because of how much they will spoil the actual movie for example. The way a game starts is meant to draw you in and intrigue you, and if you hear a lot about it beforehand, it doesn't have the same impact when you actually play the game.
There have been situations with games such as Super Smash Bros Brawl where they drip feed you with information, every day you see a new character, or a new move, or a new item you will be using in the game. By the time the game comes out I'm sick of it already and I don't even want to see it anymore. Or sometimes development time will drag on and paying attention to a game's coverage is like torturing yourself, such as with Dragon Quest IX or Duke Nukem Forever. In that case, coverage will often turn me off of a game, and if I already know I want to play it, what's the point? I've got better things to do.
Nowadays I just listen to a few podcasts where people don't talk so formally about their experiences and they often talk game theory which is much more interesting to me compared to regurgitated PR. I would recommend A Life Well Wasted, The Brainy Gamer, Gamasutra Podcast, In-Game Chat, Irrational Behavior, Mobcast, and Retronauts. If you also like those, you might like Geekbox, RebelFM, 1up Oddcast, Weekend Confirmed, Player One Podcast, Joystiq Podcast, Gamers with Jobs, Drunken Gamers Radio, IGN GameScoop and CAGCast. Hey, it makes work and commutes go by fast. -
Agreed
But what is the rest of the coverage besides recycled PR anyway? Personally I just try and get a sense of a game I'm interested in and then stop looking at coverage on it. I just want to see the basic idea of the game and what mechanics it uses, as soon as I'm interested then I cut off coverage because I don't want anything spoiled, not even the introduction. In other media I also avoid trailers because of how much they will spoil the actual movie for example. The way a game starts is meant to draw you in and intrigue you, and if you hear a lot about it beforehand, it doesn't have the same impact when you actually play the game.
There have been situations with games such as Super Smash Bros Brawl where they drip feed you with information, every day you see a new character, or a new move, or a new item you will be using in the game. By the time the game comes out I'm sick of it already and I don't even want to see it anymore. Or sometimes development time will drag on and paying attention to a game's coverage is like torturing yourself, such as with Dragon Quest IX or Duke Nukem Forever. In that case, coverage will often turn me off of a game, and if I already know I want to play it, what's the point? I've got better things to do.
Nowadays I just listen to a few podcasts where people don't talk so formally about their experiences and they often talk game theory which is much more interesting to me compared to regurgitated PR. I would recommend A Life Well Wasted, The Brainy Gamer, Gamasutra Podcast, In-Game Chat, Irrational Behavior, Mobcast, and Retronauts. If you also like those, you might like Geekbox, RebelFM, 1up Oddcast, Weekend Confirmed, Player One Podcast, Joystiq Podcast, Gamers with Jobs, Drunken Gamers Radio, IGN GameScoop and CAGCast. Hey, it makes work and commutes go by fast. -
Agreed
But what is the rest of the coverage besides recycled PR anyway? Personally I just try and get a sense of a game I'm interested in and then stop looking at coverage on it. I just want to see the basic idea of the game and what mechanics it uses, as soon as I'm interested then I cut off coverage because I don't want anything spoiled, not even the introduction. In other media I also avoid trailers because of how much they will spoil the actual movie for example. The way a game starts is meant to draw you in and intrigue you, and if you hear a lot about it beforehand, it doesn't have the same impact when you actually play the game.
There have been situations with games such as Super Smash Bros Brawl where they drip feed you with information, every day you see a new character, or a new move, or a new item you will be using in the game. By the time the game comes out I'm sick of it already and I don't even want to see it anymore. Or sometimes development time will drag on and paying attention to a game's coverage is like torturing yourself, such as with Dragon Quest IX or Duke Nukem Forever. In that case, coverage will often turn me off of a game, and if I already know I want to play it, what's the point? I've got better things to do.
Nowadays I just listen to a few podcasts where people don't talk so formally about their experiences and they often talk game theory which is much more interesting to me compared to regurgitated PR. I would recommend A Life Well Wasted, The Brainy Gamer, Gamasutra Podcast, In-Game Chat, Irrational Behavior, Mobcast, and Retronauts. If you also like those, you might like Geekbox, RebelFM, 1up Oddcast, Weekend Confirmed, Player One Podcast, Joystiq Podcast, Gamers with Jobs, Drunken Gamers Radio, IGN GameScoop and CAGCast. Hey, it makes work and commutes go by fast. -
Re:FDR's Thought Police
FYI, Gardner (the author) has a podcast now. If you can get past his obsession with punk and The Prisoner, he has some very good insights and does a great job at logical deconstruction. He got fired from his radio job (IMO) for not letting a politician weasel out of a 2nd Amendment question.
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Re:Wise choice
It still depends on Flash as well.
If you actually visit the site you'll see an HTTP link to an MP4 of the video. So they did this right.
Nearly right.
There are no rss feeds linking to the videos like in the TED talks feed.
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Re:Hmmmm... now where is that.....
Slashdot stories can be listened to in audio form via an RSS feed, as read by our own robotic overlord.
Here is the link to this particular story as it was when I just checked it. I don't know how stable that link is.
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Dynamic URLs vs. static URLs
Chatting with webmasters often reveals widespread beliefs that might have been accurate in the past, but are not necessarily up-to-date any more. This was the case when we recently talked to a couple of friends about the structure of a URL. One friend was concerned about using dynamic URLs, since (as she told us) "search engines can't cope with these." Another friend thought that dynamic URLs weren't a problem at all for search engines and that these issues were a thing of the past. One even admitted that he never understood the fuss about dynamic URLs in comparison to static URLs. For us, that was the moment we decided to read up on the topic of dynamic and static URLs. First, let's clarify what we're talking about: What is a static URL? A static URL is one that does not change, so it typically does not contain any url parameters. It can look like this: http://www.example.com/archive/january.htm. You can search for static URLs on Google by typing filetype:htm in the search field. Updating these kinds of pages can be time consuming, especially if the amount of information grows quickly, since every single page has to be hard-coded. This is why webmasters who deal with large, frequently updated sites like online shops, forum communities, blogs or content management systems may use dynamic URLs. What is a dynamic URL? If the content of a site is stored in a database and pulled for display on pages on demand, dynamic URLs maybe used. In that case the site serves basically as a template for the content. Usually, a dynamic URL would look something like this: http://code.google.com/p/google-checkout-php-sample-code/issues/detail?id=31. You can spot dynamic URLs by looking for characters like: ? = &. Dynamic URLs have the disadvantage that different URLs can have the same content. So different users might link to URLs with different parameters which have the same content. That's one reason why webmasters sometimes want to rewrite their URLs to static ones. Should I try to make my dynamic URLs look static? Following are some key points you should keep in mind while dealing with dynamic URLs:
- It's quite hard to correctly create and maintain rewrites that change dynamic URLs to static-looking URLs.
- It's much safer to serve us the original dynamic URL and let us handle the problem of detecting and avoiding problematic parameters.
- If you want to rewrite your URL, please remove unnecessary parameters while maintaining a dynamic-looking URL.
- If you want to serve a static URL instead of a dynamic URL you should create a static equivalent of your content.
Which can Googlebot read better, static or dynamic URLs? We've come across many webmasters who, like our friend, believed that static or static-looking URLs were an advantage for indexing and ranking their sites. This is based on the presumption that search engines have issues with crawling and analyzing URLs that include session IDs or source trackers. However, as a matter of fact, we at Google have made some progress in both areas. While static URLs might have a slight advantage in terms of clickthrough rates because users can easily read the urls, the decision to use database-driven websites does not imply a significant disadvantage in terms of indexing and ranking. Providing search engines with dynamic URLs should be favored over hiding parameters to make them look static. Let's now look at some of the widespread beliefs concerning dynamic URLs and correct some of the assumptions which spook webmasters.
:) Myth: "Dynamic URLs cannot be crawled." -
British sources are good
I listen to the following podcasts that cover technical subjects and are the best I've found. The Naked Scientists provide the best overall coverage in hour-long sessions. Leoville's Futures in Biotech is very good in this cutting-edge field, but offers a limited number of entries. Perhaps more donations would enable the producer to do more. Microbeworld offers one-minute bites. Some of the leoville material that covers his radio call-in program last 2 hrs. Except for the FIB, all of his stuff is electronics-related (computers--Mac and Windows --, computer security, cell phones, digital cameras, and home theater). Some casts involve panels and guests. I've not included several more he does relating to food and children. Time compression software or other enhanced playback options are helpful with it as well as the other items if your time is limited.The Lancet offers several categories of current medical info. Podnuts is a computer repair discussion. Ziepod on Vista Home Premium works well to download all new episodes once a week. http://leoville.tv/podcasts/twit.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/microbeworld http://www.theworld.org/rss/tech.xml http://leoville.tv/podcasts/kfi.xml http://leoville.tv/podcasts/fib.xml http://www.thenakedscientists.com/naked_scientists_podcast.xml http://www.cbc.ca/podcasting/includes/quirksaio.xml http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/docarchive/rss.xml http://leoville.tv/podcasts/leo.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laneur.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/lancet.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laninf.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/mh/rss.xml
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British sources are good
I listen to the following podcasts that cover technical subjects and are the best I've found. The Naked Scientists provide the best overall coverage in hour-long sessions. Leoville's Futures in Biotech is very good in this cutting-edge field, but offers a limited number of entries. Perhaps more donations would enable the producer to do more. Microbeworld offers one-minute bites. Some of the leoville material that covers his radio call-in program last 2 hrs. Except for the FIB, all of his stuff is electronics-related (computers--Mac and Windows --, computer security, cell phones, digital cameras, and home theater). Some casts involve panels and guests. I've not included several more he does relating to food and children. Time compression software or other enhanced playback options are helpful with it as well as the other items if your time is limited.The Lancet offers several categories of current medical info. Podnuts is a computer repair discussion. Ziepod on Vista Home Premium works well to download all new episodes once a week. http://leoville.tv/podcasts/twit.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/microbeworld http://www.theworld.org/rss/tech.xml http://leoville.tv/podcasts/kfi.xml http://leoville.tv/podcasts/fib.xml http://www.thenakedscientists.com/naked_scientists_podcast.xml http://www.cbc.ca/podcasting/includes/quirksaio.xml http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/docarchive/rss.xml http://leoville.tv/podcasts/leo.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laneur.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/lancet.xml http://podcast.thelancet.com/laninf.xml http://feeds.feedburner.com/podnutz http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/worldservice/mh/rss.xml
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Re:No RSS/Quick download?
I've started reposting them to my blog and made and RSS feed so you can download them easily with an RSS enabled media player like iTunes. I separated it out from my standard feed so you won't get all of my other junk in there. Here's the subscription link. http://feeds.feedburner.com/WhatIsNoiseTheLastHope
I don't have time to repost all of them (must do each one as a separate post, which takes a while) but I'll finish up tonight. I think there's 10 or so of them on there now. -
My feeds.
The technology stuff:
Slashdot
ThinkGeek Clearance
ThinkGeek What's new
Was a promising Image Editor. - Pixel Image Editor
Great discount on technology and sometimes other gear.
More technology discounts.
Latest video tools.
Mac Software discounts.
discounted product sales.
More Mac Software discounts.A few local feeds:
Durham, NC food reviews. - Carpe Durham
Durham, NC drink specials.
Raleigh, NC drink specials.
Raleigh, NC Photo blog. - Goodnight, Raleigh!
Chapel Hill, NC drink specials. -
Re:More feeds from Mr. Coward.
Try this for the flash free version of Dilbert: http://feeds.feedburner.com/DilbertDailyStrip
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feeds
Tech:
I, Cringley http://www.pbs.org/cringely/pulpit/rss2.xml
Freedom to Tinker http://www.freedom-to-tinker.com/?feed=rss2
Freenode staffblog http://blog.freenode.net/?feed=rss2
Gentoo Monthly Newsletter http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/rss.xml
Xaprb (MySQL) http://www.xaprb.com/blog/feed/atom/Games:
Cruise Elroy ("Intelligent discussion of video games") http://cruiseelroy.net/feed/
Jonathan Drain's D20 Source http://d20.jonnydigital.com/feed
Socratic Design http://socratesrpg.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default
Stephen's Weblog (NDS homebrew) http://blog.akkit.org/feed/
StupidRanger http://feeds.feedburner.com/Stupidrangercom
Zero Punctuation http://www.escapistmagazine.com/rss/articles/editorials/zeropunctuation
Zelda Reorchestrated http://www.zreomusic.com/feed/
Used to read The Escapist, quite enjoying the magazine format, but seven or so articles all on the same day each week became too much (once a month please!). The format has changed since then, it just isn't the same.And the Comics:
xkcd comic & blag
Penny Arcade
and no feed, but 8-bit TheaterAnd a number of various personal feeds
Slashdot I just check every few hours, I can be assured there is going to be a new article to read
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My feeds
In order of interestingness:
- http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot - Slashdot (Duh)
- http://xkcd.com/rss.xml - xkcd
- http://blag.xkcd.com/feed/ - xkcd blag
- http://feeds.feedburner.com/OfficialGmailBlog - Official Gmail blog
- http://feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/MKuf?format=xml - Official Google blog
- http://www.runehead.com/feeds/rss/RuneScapeNews.xml - Runescape news (provided by RuneHead)
I just put all those in the toolbar in Firefox and click one and run the mouse over them to look for new ones.
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My feeds
In order of interestingness:
- http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdot - Slashdot (Duh)
- http://xkcd.com/rss.xml - xkcd
- http://blag.xkcd.com/feed/ - xkcd blag
- http://feeds.feedburner.com/OfficialGmailBlog - Official Gmail blog
- http://feeds.feedburner.com/blogspot/MKuf?format=xml - Official Google blog
- http://www.runehead.com/feeds/rss/RuneScapeNews.xml - Runescape news (provided by RuneHead)
I just put all those in the toolbar in Firefox and click one and run the mouse over them to look for new ones.
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My Offical Feed ListHerewith, my own RSS feeds list. I have a few categories of stuff I keep up on on a regular basis; this listing includes only (mostly) blogs that are posting regularly.
Second Life Blogs - Blogs about the Second Life virtual world. Usually I list these by avatar name.
- The Lexx's Second Life - Alexzandria Aeon ("Lexx") is my "SL daughter" and a businesswoman.
- Jacek Antonelli - An artist and commentator on various aspects of the world.
- Hamlet Au - New World Notes - The "big dog" in Second Life blogging. Hamlet Au used to work for Linden Lab, and wrote a book, The Making of Second Life.
- life|cubed - One of my friends, "Padre" Triste Bertrand, who is also a minister in RL.
- Cala - Transgender in Second Life - She writes about some interesting topics.
- Evans Avenue Exit - I write this one.
:-) I post about current events, scripting, and whatever else suits my fancy. - Vint Falken - One of the premier European SL bloggers (she's from Belgium).
- Grand Unified Linden Blog - Official news and information from Linden Lab.
- Torley Lives - Everybody in Second Life should know Torley Linden. Torley is unique, helpful, and watermelon-flavored.
- An Engine Fit For My Proceeding - Ordinal Malaprop is SL's own version of Ada Lovelace...a fine Victorian lady and a top-flight scripter.
- Massively (Second Life) - The latest news and information about Second Life. (Massively.com also covers other virtual worlds and MMOs.)
- Second Thoughts - Prokofy Neva is perhaps the most-hated person in SL, and is sort of the "official gadfly." He's well worth reading for an alternate perspective, though.
- Dwell On It - Tateru Nino is one of the smartest people I know. Her writing is part of what got me into SL in the first place.
- MeraTalk - Mera Pixel is insightful, witty, and very purple.
- Second Life Grid Status Reports - When there are problems with SL--an all-too-often occurrence these days, alas--Linden Lab posts here.
Political Blogs - This is stuff with a right-wing bent, and is the section that will probably be most responsible for this post being modded down.
:-/- The Smallest Minority - Kevin Baker is partly a gunblogger, partly an excellent commentator. He's had good posts recently about education.
- La Shawn Barber's Corner - A Christian blogger who only dabbles in politics these days, spending more time writing about music and digital technology.
- Leslie Carbone - A Virginia political blogger who I found via Twitter.
- Personal Effects - Connie du Toit is one of the clearest-minded writers you'll find on many subjects.
- Geopoliticus - Kim du Toit (yes, he and Connie are married) is the L33t Master of Firearms, and an insightfu
-
My Offical Feed ListHerewith, my own RSS feeds list. I have a few categories of stuff I keep up on on a regular basis; this listing includes only (mostly) blogs that are posting regularly.
Second Life Blogs - Blogs about the Second Life virtual world. Usually I list these by avatar name.
- The Lexx's Second Life - Alexzandria Aeon ("Lexx") is my "SL daughter" and a businesswoman.
- Jacek Antonelli - An artist and commentator on various aspects of the world.
- Hamlet Au - New World Notes - The "big dog" in Second Life blogging. Hamlet Au used to work for Linden Lab, and wrote a book, The Making of Second Life.
- life|cubed - One of my friends, "Padre" Triste Bertrand, who is also a minister in RL.
- Cala - Transgender in Second Life - She writes about some interesting topics.
- Evans Avenue Exit - I write this one.
:-) I post about current events, scripting, and whatever else suits my fancy. - Vint Falken - One of the premier European SL bloggers (she's from Belgium).
- Grand Unified Linden Blog - Official news and information from Linden Lab.
- Torley Lives - Everybody in Second Life should know Torley Linden. Torley is unique, helpful, and watermelon-flavored.
- An Engine Fit For My Proceeding - Ordinal Malaprop is SL's own version of Ada Lovelace...a fine Victorian lady and a top-flight scripter.
- Massively (Second Life) - The latest news and information about Second Life. (Massively.com also covers other virtual worlds and MMOs.)
- Second Thoughts - Prokofy Neva is perhaps the most-hated person in SL, and is sort of the "official gadfly." He's well worth reading for an alternate perspective, though.
- Dwell On It - Tateru Nino is one of the smartest people I know. Her writing is part of what got me into SL in the first place.
- MeraTalk - Mera Pixel is insightful, witty, and very purple.
- Second Life Grid Status Reports - When there are problems with SL--an all-too-often occurrence these days, alas--Linden Lab posts here.
Political Blogs - This is stuff with a right-wing bent, and is the section that will probably be most responsible for this post being modded down.
:-/- The Smallest Minority - Kevin Baker is partly a gunblogger, partly an excellent commentator. He's had good posts recently about education.
- La Shawn Barber's Corner - A Christian blogger who only dabbles in politics these days, spending more time writing about music and digital technology.
- Leslie Carbone - A Virginia political blogger who I found via Twitter.
- Personal Effects - Connie du Toit is one of the clearest-minded writers you'll find on many subjects.
- Geopoliticus - Kim du Toit (yes, he and Connie are married) is the L33t Master of Firearms, and an insightfu
-
My Offical Feed ListHerewith, my own RSS feeds list. I have a few categories of stuff I keep up on on a regular basis; this listing includes only (mostly) blogs that are posting regularly.
Second Life Blogs - Blogs about the Second Life virtual world. Usually I list these by avatar name.
- The Lexx's Second Life - Alexzandria Aeon ("Lexx") is my "SL daughter" and a businesswoman.
- Jacek Antonelli - An artist and commentator on various aspects of the world.
- Hamlet Au - New World Notes - The "big dog" in Second Life blogging. Hamlet Au used to work for Linden Lab, and wrote a book, The Making of Second Life.
- life|cubed - One of my friends, "Padre" Triste Bertrand, who is also a minister in RL.
- Cala - Transgender in Second Life - She writes about some interesting topics.
- Evans Avenue Exit - I write this one.
:-) I post about current events, scripting, and whatever else suits my fancy. - Vint Falken - One of the premier European SL bloggers (she's from Belgium).
- Grand Unified Linden Blog - Official news and information from Linden Lab.
- Torley Lives - Everybody in Second Life should know Torley Linden. Torley is unique, helpful, and watermelon-flavored.
- An Engine Fit For My Proceeding - Ordinal Malaprop is SL's own version of Ada Lovelace...a fine Victorian lady and a top-flight scripter.
- Massively (Second Life) - The latest news and information about Second Life. (Massively.com also covers other virtual worlds and MMOs.)
- Second Thoughts - Prokofy Neva is perhaps the most-hated person in SL, and is sort of the "official gadfly." He's well worth reading for an alternate perspective, though.
- Dwell On It - Tateru Nino is one of the smartest people I know. Her writing is part of what got me into SL in the first place.
- MeraTalk - Mera Pixel is insightful, witty, and very purple.
- Second Life Grid Status Reports - When there are problems with SL--an all-too-often occurrence these days, alas--Linden Lab posts here.
Political Blogs - This is stuff with a right-wing bent, and is the section that will probably be most responsible for this post being modded down.
:-/- The Smallest Minority - Kevin Baker is partly a gunblogger, partly an excellent commentator. He's had good posts recently about education.
- La Shawn Barber's Corner - A Christian blogger who only dabbles in politics these days, spending more time writing about music and digital technology.
- Leslie Carbone - A Virginia political blogger who I found via Twitter.
- Personal Effects - Connie du Toit is one of the clearest-minded writers you'll find on many subjects.
- Geopoliticus - Kim du Toit (yes, he and Connie are married) is the L33t Master of Firearms, and an insightfu
-
Re:I don't get itTry an offline reader. Feedreader is good for Windows. Go to your 3 sites and load the feeds in. Set the feeds to update every hour. Then, when the mood strikes you to check your sites, you don't have to load anything at all. The content is already there, right on your desktop, waiting whenever the Feedreader icon is orange. Also, I GUARANTEE that once you start tacking feeds, you'll go to a new site you like and say "Hey. I can add this feed." and you'll be off and away. I started with exactly two and look at me now.
Here's my list, organized by folder. If a folder is marked (collapsed), I read those feeds as a group by clicking on the folder. Note: if the descriptions seem basic, /. was bitching about "too few characters per line," so I had to add some filler.- Feedreader (collapsed) - these two feeds came with Feedreader, and I just didn't delete them.
- Games
-
- Deus Ex Projects - two projects for my favorite game of all time that both move one inch toward completion every 6 months.
-
- Deus Ex HTDP - high-definition texture pack. Text feed, news and announcements.
- Project 2027 - new levels and story for Deus Ex. Text feed, news and announcements.
- The Escapist: Zero Punctuation - if you're not watching these game reviews, you should be. Feed is links to the weekly ZP posts.
- Valve Steam news and updates - Steam is Valve's content delivery system. This feed includes game updates and general news. Text only.
- News/aggregator
-
- CNN top stories - this feed can be annoying because it sometimes contains a story summary in the item, but more often it just contains a link to the story. I wish it had summaries more often.
- Fark - Fark is a news aggregator site that, like
/., combines user submission with a little editorial control (as opposed to the Digg method). This feed is of the mainpage stories and contains only the headlines and a link. Sophomoric and dark humor are mainstays. - MSNBC - this is the top stories feed, editorially selected. They also have a "most viewed" feed if you're into celeb news and dogs in funny poses.
- MSNBC - Coundown - feed of Countdown with Keith Olbermann video clips, updated nightly, with the first two stories usually posted before the show is over. Feed is links to the clips.
- Slashdot - log in, your feed is personalized to your mainpage prefs.
/.'s own feed contains headlines and story summaries.
- Politics
-
- Crooks and Liars - This is a blog that supports more liberal ideals than the party line. Feed is of front page stories and contains attachments of any items referenced in the stories (usually QT files, sometimes PDFs)
- Daily Kos - The largest liberal log/community on the net, this one is much more toward party line. Text only.
- Electoral-vote.com - election news and coverage with a map that updates the electoral college count by poll average. Contains the site's daily upd
-
Re:I don't get itTry an offline reader. Feedreader is good for Windows. Go to your 3 sites and load the feeds in. Set the feeds to update every hour. Then, when the mood strikes you to check your sites, you don't have to load anything at all. The content is already there, right on your desktop, waiting whenever the Feedreader icon is orange. Also, I GUARANTEE that once you start tacking feeds, you'll go to a new site you like and say "Hey. I can add this feed." and you'll be off and away. I started with exactly two and look at me now.
Here's my list, organized by folder. If a folder is marked (collapsed), I read those feeds as a group by clicking on the folder. Note: if the descriptions seem basic, /. was bitching about "too few characters per line," so I had to add some filler.- Feedreader (collapsed) - these two feeds came with Feedreader, and I just didn't delete them.
- Games
-
- Deus Ex Projects - two projects for my favorite game of all time that both move one inch toward completion every 6 months.
-
- Deus Ex HTDP - high-definition texture pack. Text feed, news and announcements.
- Project 2027 - new levels and story for Deus Ex. Text feed, news and announcements.
- The Escapist: Zero Punctuation - if you're not watching these game reviews, you should be. Feed is links to the weekly ZP posts.
- Valve Steam news and updates - Steam is Valve's content delivery system. This feed includes game updates and general news. Text only.
- News/aggregator
-
- CNN top stories - this feed can be annoying because it sometimes contains a story summary in the item, but more often it just contains a link to the story. I wish it had summaries more often.
- Fark - Fark is a news aggregator site that, like
/., combines user submission with a little editorial control (as opposed to the Digg method). This feed is of the mainpage stories and contains only the headlines and a link. Sophomoric and dark humor are mainstays. - MSNBC - this is the top stories feed, editorially selected. They also have a "most viewed" feed if you're into celeb news and dogs in funny poses.
- MSNBC - Coundown - feed of Countdown with Keith Olbermann video clips, updated nightly, with the first two stories usually posted before the show is over. Feed is links to the clips.
- Slashdot - log in, your feed is personalized to your mainpage prefs.
/.'s own feed contains headlines and story summaries.
- Politics
-
- Crooks and Liars - This is a blog that supports more liberal ideals than the party line. Feed is of front page stories and contains attachments of any items referenced in the stories (usually QT files, sometimes PDFs)
- Daily Kos - The largest liberal log/community on the net, this one is much more toward party line. Text only.
- Electoral-vote.com - election news and coverage with a map that updates the electoral college count by poll average. Contains the site's daily upd
-
Re:I don't get itTry an offline reader. Feedreader is good for Windows. Go to your 3 sites and load the feeds in. Set the feeds to update every hour. Then, when the mood strikes you to check your sites, you don't have to load anything at all. The content is already there, right on your desktop, waiting whenever the Feedreader icon is orange. Also, I GUARANTEE that once you start tacking feeds, you'll go to a new site you like and say "Hey. I can add this feed." and you'll be off and away. I started with exactly two and look at me now.
Here's my list, organized by folder. If a folder is marked (collapsed), I read those feeds as a group by clicking on the folder. Note: if the descriptions seem basic, /. was bitching about "too few characters per line," so I had to add some filler.- Feedreader (collapsed) - these two feeds came with Feedreader, and I just didn't delete them.
- Games
-
- Deus Ex Projects - two projects for my favorite game of all time that both move one inch toward completion every 6 months.
-
- Deus Ex HTDP - high-definition texture pack. Text feed, news and announcements.
- Project 2027 - new levels and story for Deus Ex. Text feed, news and announcements.
- The Escapist: Zero Punctuation - if you're not watching these game reviews, you should be. Feed is links to the weekly ZP posts.
- Valve Steam news and updates - Steam is Valve's content delivery system. This feed includes game updates and general news. Text only.
- News/aggregator
-
- CNN top stories - this feed can be annoying because it sometimes contains a story summary in the item, but more often it just contains a link to the story. I wish it had summaries more often.
- Fark - Fark is a news aggregator site that, like
/., combines user submission with a little editorial control (as opposed to the Digg method). This feed is of the mainpage stories and contains only the headlines and a link. Sophomoric and dark humor are mainstays. - MSNBC - this is the top stories feed, editorially selected. They also have a "most viewed" feed if you're into celeb news and dogs in funny poses.
- MSNBC - Coundown - feed of Countdown with Keith Olbermann video clips, updated nightly, with the first two stories usually posted before the show is over. Feed is links to the clips.
- Slashdot - log in, your feed is personalized to your mainpage prefs.
/.'s own feed contains headlines and story summaries.
- Politics
-
- Crooks and Liars - This is a blog that supports more liberal ideals than the party line. Feed is of front page stories and contains attachments of any items referenced in the stories (usually QT files, sometimes PDFs)
- Daily Kos - The largest liberal log/community on the net, this one is much more toward party line. Text only.
- Electoral-vote.com - election news and coverage with a map that updates the electoral college count by poll average. Contains the site's daily upd
-
Which RSS feeds? Where do you start?
First I will add a plug for https://www.bloglines.com/ â" RSS feeds where ever I can log in, via HTTPS. Great for those feeds I read whenever & everywhere; and for those I only check when waiting to board the airplane. In my bloglines collection I have around 400 feeds, which will grow after looking through these threads.
:) Some selections that hopefully no one else has mentioned:Amusement:
http://failblog.wordpress.com/feed/
All about the Failhttp://lolbots.com/?feed=rss2
Robots making the LOLz, though not updated often.http://lolgeeks.com/?feed=rss2
Geeks making the LOLz, though not updated often.The latest limerick database entries - http://peeron.com/tickers/limerickdb.xml
The Triumph of Bullshit - http://bullshit.tumblr.com/rss
Diesel Sweeties by R Stevens - http://www.dieselsweeties.com/ds-unifeed.xml
PHD Comics - http://www.phdcomics.com/gradfeed.php
Ever spent time in academia? You will relate to this web comic.Unshelved - http://www.unshelved.com/rss.aspx
A web comic about a library. Ssssshhhuusshh!Indexed - http://indexed.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Take two (or more) topics and compare them using graphs & charts â" full of insight & lolz.Computerworld Shark Tank News - http://feeds.computerworld.com/Computerworld/Shark/Tank
Many stories, full of humor and face palmOverheard in the Office - http://www.overheardintheoffice.com/atom.xml
Instead of what was overheard in New York, now worldwide and from your office.Common geek topics (those blogs that seem to hit all the topics days or weeks before you see them on Slashdot):
Didnt You Hear... http://www.didntyouhear.com/feed/The Daily WTF - http://thedailywtf.com/rss.aspx
Global Nerdy - http://globalnerdy.com/feed/
Shopping:
http://content.dealnews.com/dealnews/rss/todays-edition.xml
Many of those geek toys you needNewegg.com daily deals: http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=DailyDeals&nm_mc=OTC-RSS
Need I say more?Slickdeals: http://www.slickdeals.net/rss.php
Need I say more?Woot! http://www.woot.com/blog/rss.aspx
Dumb political stuff:
Homeland Stupidity: http://feeds.feedburner.com/HomelandStupidity
Government gaffes, bureaucratic blunders and incumbent incompetenceGroklaw: http://www.groklaw.net/backend/GrokLaw.rdf
Declan McCullagh's Politech http://www.politechbot.com/info/rss/politech.xml
Also not updated often, but on target when it is.Cryptome: http://cryptome.org/cryptome.xml
You can get lost here for hoursMusic:
House of Blues: http://hob.com/venues/clubvenues/lasvegas/
The RSS feed for the local House of B -
games & game dev:
Lambda The Ultimate (programming languages): http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/rss.xml
Greg Costikyan (culture): http://feeds.feedburner.com/costik/gXjD
Darius Kazemi (gamedev networking): http://tinysubversions.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Warren Spector (design): http://junctionpoint.wordpress.com/feed/
Tom Forsyth (graphics): http://www.eelpi.gotdns.org/blog.wiki.xml
Christer Ericson (collision detection): http://realtimecollisiondetection.net/blog/?feed=rss2
Erin Catto (physics): http://www.gphysics.com/feed
Duncan Fyfe? (writing): http://www.hitselfdestruct.com/feeds/posts/default
Soren Johnson (design): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Designer-notes
Fun Motion (physics games): http://www.fun-motion.com/feed/
Play This Thing (short reviews & commentary): http://playthisthing.com/allposts/feed
GoGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Gogamercom48hourMadnessSpecial
CheapAssGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/cheapassgamer
Kotaku (news & commentary): http://kotaku.com/index.xml
Rock, Paper, Shotgun (PC gaming): http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/?feed=rss2
-
games & game dev:
Lambda The Ultimate (programming languages): http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/rss.xml
Greg Costikyan (culture): http://feeds.feedburner.com/costik/gXjD
Darius Kazemi (gamedev networking): http://tinysubversions.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Warren Spector (design): http://junctionpoint.wordpress.com/feed/
Tom Forsyth (graphics): http://www.eelpi.gotdns.org/blog.wiki.xml
Christer Ericson (collision detection): http://realtimecollisiondetection.net/blog/?feed=rss2
Erin Catto (physics): http://www.gphysics.com/feed
Duncan Fyfe? (writing): http://www.hitselfdestruct.com/feeds/posts/default
Soren Johnson (design): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Designer-notes
Fun Motion (physics games): http://www.fun-motion.com/feed/
Play This Thing (short reviews & commentary): http://playthisthing.com/allposts/feed
GoGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Gogamercom48hourMadnessSpecial
CheapAssGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/cheapassgamer
Kotaku (news & commentary): http://kotaku.com/index.xml
Rock, Paper, Shotgun (PC gaming): http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/?feed=rss2
-
games & game dev:
Lambda The Ultimate (programming languages): http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/rss.xml
Greg Costikyan (culture): http://feeds.feedburner.com/costik/gXjD
Darius Kazemi (gamedev networking): http://tinysubversions.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Warren Spector (design): http://junctionpoint.wordpress.com/feed/
Tom Forsyth (graphics): http://www.eelpi.gotdns.org/blog.wiki.xml
Christer Ericson (collision detection): http://realtimecollisiondetection.net/blog/?feed=rss2
Erin Catto (physics): http://www.gphysics.com/feed
Duncan Fyfe? (writing): http://www.hitselfdestruct.com/feeds/posts/default
Soren Johnson (design): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Designer-notes
Fun Motion (physics games): http://www.fun-motion.com/feed/
Play This Thing (short reviews & commentary): http://playthisthing.com/allposts/feed
GoGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Gogamercom48hourMadnessSpecial
CheapAssGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/cheapassgamer
Kotaku (news & commentary): http://kotaku.com/index.xml
Rock, Paper, Shotgun (PC gaming): http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/?feed=rss2
-
games & game dev:
Lambda The Ultimate (programming languages): http://lambda-the-ultimate.org/rss.xml
Greg Costikyan (culture): http://feeds.feedburner.com/costik/gXjD
Darius Kazemi (gamedev networking): http://tinysubversions.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Warren Spector (design): http://junctionpoint.wordpress.com/feed/
Tom Forsyth (graphics): http://www.eelpi.gotdns.org/blog.wiki.xml
Christer Ericson (collision detection): http://realtimecollisiondetection.net/blog/?feed=rss2
Erin Catto (physics): http://www.gphysics.com/feed
Duncan Fyfe? (writing): http://www.hitselfdestruct.com/feeds/posts/default
Soren Johnson (design): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Designer-notes
Fun Motion (physics games): http://www.fun-motion.com/feed/
Play This Thing (short reviews & commentary): http://playthisthing.com/allposts/feed
GoGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/Gogamercom48hourMadnessSpecial
CheapAssGamer (game deals): http://feeds.feedburner.com/cheapassgamer
Kotaku (news & commentary): http://kotaku.com/index.xml
Rock, Paper, Shotgun (PC gaming): http://www.rockpapershotgun.com/?feed=rss2
-
My Turn
Slashdot
http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdotWWdN: In Exile
http://wilwheaton.typepad.com/wwdnbackup/rss.xmlPenny Arcade
http://www.penny-arcade.com/rss.xmlThe Merry Corsetier
http://community.livejournal.com/corsetmakers/data/rssT-Shirt Surgery
http://community.livejournal.com/t_shirt_surgery/data/rssWinnipeg Bargain Barn Swap Meet and Flea Market
http://community.livejournal.com/winnipeg/data/rssPost Secret
http://postsecret.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rssNational Post
http://feeds.feedburner.com/NP_Top_Stories.rssAstronomy Picture of the Day RSS Feed
http://www.acme.com/jef/apod/rss.xmlDilbert Daily Strip
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DilbertDailyStripWe The Robots
http://www.wetherobots.com/feed/Disclaimer: I have removed all of my friend's blog's feeds.
-
My Turn
Slashdot
http://rss.slashdot.org/Slashdot/slashdotWWdN: In Exile
http://wilwheaton.typepad.com/wwdnbackup/rss.xmlPenny Arcade
http://www.penny-arcade.com/rss.xmlThe Merry Corsetier
http://community.livejournal.com/corsetmakers/data/rssT-Shirt Surgery
http://community.livejournal.com/t_shirt_surgery/data/rssWinnipeg Bargain Barn Swap Meet and Flea Market
http://community.livejournal.com/winnipeg/data/rssPost Secret
http://postsecret.blogspot.com/feeds/posts/default?alt=rssNational Post
http://feeds.feedburner.com/NP_Top_Stories.rssAstronomy Picture of the Day RSS Feed
http://www.acme.com/jef/apod/rss.xmlDilbert Daily Strip
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DilbertDailyStripWe The Robots
http://www.wetherobots.com/feed/Disclaimer: I have removed all of my friend's blog's feeds.
-
Optical Illusions/Slashdot
http://feeds.feedburner.com/VisualFunHouse - Optical Illusions Updated daily, pretty cool stuff. and of course slashdot
:) -
More feeds from Mr. Coward.
*BASH Cures Cancer
--Great tips & ideas for anyone who regularly scripts in BASH. If you use the shell, give it a look.And then the usual stuff:
*BBC News
*Various Economist Feeds;
*Hack-A-Day;
*The Register;
*Tranny Farm;
*xkcd, webcomic;
*Penny Arcade, webcomic;
*Ctrl-Alt-Del, webcomic;I can't be bothered with Dilbert, since it's gone Flash.
-
Re:Most important one
I have more than 50 feeds in my aggregator (Sage), but easily the most important of these is http://feeds.feedburner.com/ICanHasCheezburger
.
Let me guess, you are an editor of the site? -
Some choice feeds I monitor in no particular order
0x000000 Security. Very snarky and somewhat crazy security blogger. Usually interesting.
Phoronix. Linux + hardware + games = Nothing not to love unless you are lame.
Anandtech. Hardware. Glorious hardware. Make sure to put on the adult diapers before visting.
HowtoForge. How to do stuff. Usually in Linux.
The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs. More fun than a barrel of iMacs.
Signal to Noise. The official 37signals blog. They are pompus, they can be pricks at times, but they usually have interesting things to say.
Scobleizer. Robert Scoble. His job is talking to people using social networking tools who own companies that make social networking tools. At some point there will be a business plan. Just not today. -
Re:MineIf you're ashamed of the comics you read to the point where you completely dismiss them as "bad" or "stupid", why even bother listing them? For that matter, why be ashamed?
Here are the ones I read, and I see no reason to be ashamed of any of them. If you don't like them, no one is forcing you to read them.
-
Re:MineIf you're ashamed of the comics you read to the point where you completely dismiss them as "bad" or "stupid", why even bother listing them? For that matter, why be ashamed?
Here are the ones I read, and I see no reason to be ashamed of any of them. If you don't like them, no one is forcing you to read them.
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registereduser1946
My Feeds: Select: All 95 subscriptions, None, Unassigned A to Z Kids Stuff children http://www.atozkidsstuff.com/atoz.xml ABC News: Top Stories news http://my.abcnews.go.com/rsspublic/fp_rss20.xml About Computing Center technology http://z.about.com/6/g/pcworld/b/rss2.xml About.com Archaeology Archaeology http://z.about.com/6/g/archaeology/b/rss2.xml All Things Digital technology http://feeds.allthingsd.com/atd-feed/ Archaeology News Archaeology news http://www.topix.net/rss/science/archaeology.xml Ars Technica tech news http://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/BAaf ArsTechnica: Security Content Security technology http://feeds.feedburner.com/arstechnica/security BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition U.K. http://newsrss.bbc.co.uk/rss/newsonline_world_edition/front_page/rss.xml BBC News | Science/Nature | World Edition Science/Nature http://newsrss.bbc.co.uk/rss/newsonline_world_edition/science/nature/rss.xml Boing Boing odd http://feeds.boingboing.net/boingboing/iBag Breaking News: CBSNews.com news http://www.cbsnews.com/feeds/rss/main.rss Breitbart.tv varied news topics http://www.breitbart.com/xml/recentvideo.xml ChannelWeb Complete Feed Computer news http://www.crn.com/cwb/globalcontent/cweball/index.xml;jsessionid=L0I1HBDQISHBCQSNDLQSKH0CJUNN2JVN Christian Science Monitor | Top Stories news http://www.csmonitor.com/rss/top.rss CNN.com - Offbeat odd http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_offbeat.rss CNN.com - Politics politics http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_allpolitics.rss CNN.com - U.S. U.S. news http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_us.rss Computerworld Breaking News technology http://feeds.computerworld.com/Computerworld/News Cool Tools technology http://feeds.feedburner.com/CoolTools Courant.com - Connecticut News Ct. news http://feeds.courant.com/Courant/ConnecticutNews Defense Tech U.S. defense news http://www.defensetech.org/index.rdf Discovery News - Technology technology http://dsc.discovery.com/news/subjects/technology/xdb/topstories.xml Drudge Report news http://feeds.feedburner.com/FeedPalooza/lwDu Dvorak Uncensored news http://www.dvorak.org/blog/?feed=rss2 Engadget robots & gadgets http://www.engadget.com/rss.xml Extremetech technology http://rssnewsapps.ziffdavis.com/extreme.xml Fark.com news http://www.pluck.com/rss/fark.rss FileForum software http://fileforum.b
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registereduser1946
My Feeds: Select: All 95 subscriptions, None, Unassigned A to Z Kids Stuff children http://www.atozkidsstuff.com/atoz.xml ABC News: Top Stories news http://my.abcnews.go.com/rsspublic/fp_rss20.xml About Computing Center technology http://z.about.com/6/g/pcworld/b/rss2.xml About.com Archaeology Archaeology http://z.about.com/6/g/archaeology/b/rss2.xml All Things Digital technology http://feeds.allthingsd.com/atd-feed/ Archaeology News Archaeology news http://www.topix.net/rss/science/archaeology.xml Ars Technica tech news http://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/BAaf ArsTechnica: Security Content Security technology http://feeds.feedburner.com/arstechnica/security BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition U.K. http://newsrss.bbc.co.uk/rss/newsonline_world_edition/front_page/rss.xml BBC News | Science/Nature | World Edition Science/Nature http://newsrss.bbc.co.uk/rss/newsonline_world_edition/science/nature/rss.xml Boing Boing odd http://feeds.boingboing.net/boingboing/iBag Breaking News: CBSNews.com news http://www.cbsnews.com/feeds/rss/main.rss Breitbart.tv varied news topics http://www.breitbart.com/xml/recentvideo.xml ChannelWeb Complete Feed Computer news http://www.crn.com/cwb/globalcontent/cweball/index.xml;jsessionid=L0I1HBDQISHBCQSNDLQSKH0CJUNN2JVN Christian Science Monitor | Top Stories news http://www.csmonitor.com/rss/top.rss CNN.com - Offbeat odd http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_offbeat.rss CNN.com - Politics politics http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_allpolitics.rss CNN.com - U.S. U.S. news http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_us.rss Computerworld Breaking News technology http://feeds.computerworld.com/Computerworld/News Cool Tools technology http://feeds.feedburner.com/CoolTools Courant.com - Connecticut News Ct. news http://feeds.courant.com/Courant/ConnecticutNews Defense Tech U.S. defense news http://www.defensetech.org/index.rdf Discovery News - Technology technology http://dsc.discovery.com/news/subjects/technology/xdb/topstories.xml Drudge Report news http://feeds.feedburner.com/FeedPalooza/lwDu Dvorak Uncensored news http://www.dvorak.org/blog/?feed=rss2 Engadget robots & gadgets http://www.engadget.com/rss.xml Extremetech technology http://rssnewsapps.ziffdavis.com/extreme.xml Fark.com news http://www.pluck.com/rss/fark.rss FileForum software http://fileforum.b
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registereduser1946
My Feeds: Select: All 95 subscriptions, None, Unassigned A to Z Kids Stuff children http://www.atozkidsstuff.com/atoz.xml ABC News: Top Stories news http://my.abcnews.go.com/rsspublic/fp_rss20.xml About Computing Center technology http://z.about.com/6/g/pcworld/b/rss2.xml About.com Archaeology Archaeology http://z.about.com/6/g/archaeology/b/rss2.xml All Things Digital technology http://feeds.allthingsd.com/atd-feed/ Archaeology News Archaeology news http://www.topix.net/rss/science/archaeology.xml Ars Technica tech news http://feeds.arstechnica.com/arstechnica/BAaf ArsTechnica: Security Content Security technology http://feeds.feedburner.com/arstechnica/security BBC News | News Front Page | World Edition U.K. http://newsrss.bbc.co.uk/rss/newsonline_world_edition/front_page/rss.xml BBC News | Science/Nature | World Edition Science/Nature http://newsrss.bbc.co.uk/rss/newsonline_world_edition/science/nature/rss.xml Boing Boing odd http://feeds.boingboing.net/boingboing/iBag Breaking News: CBSNews.com news http://www.cbsnews.com/feeds/rss/main.rss Breitbart.tv varied news topics http://www.breitbart.com/xml/recentvideo.xml ChannelWeb Complete Feed Computer news http://www.crn.com/cwb/globalcontent/cweball/index.xml;jsessionid=L0I1HBDQISHBCQSNDLQSKH0CJUNN2JVN Christian Science Monitor | Top Stories news http://www.csmonitor.com/rss/top.rss CNN.com - Offbeat odd http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_offbeat.rss CNN.com - Politics politics http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_allpolitics.rss CNN.com - U.S. U.S. news http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_us.rss Computerworld Breaking News technology http://feeds.computerworld.com/Computerworld/News Cool Tools technology http://feeds.feedburner.com/CoolTools Courant.com - Connecticut News Ct. news http://feeds.courant.com/Courant/ConnecticutNews Defense Tech U.S. defense news http://www.defensetech.org/index.rdf Discovery News - Technology technology http://dsc.discovery.com/news/subjects/technology/xdb/topstories.xml Drudge Report news http://feeds.feedburner.com/FeedPalooza/lwDu Dvorak Uncensored news http://www.dvorak.org/blog/?feed=rss2 Engadget robots & gadgets http://www.engadget.com/rss.xml Extremetech technology http://rssnewsapps.ziffdavis.com/extreme.xml Fark.com news http://www.pluck.com/rss/fark.rss FileForum software http://fileforum.b
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Re:Debian Package a Day
First thing every morning:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DilbertDailyStripI found this one on
/. but it hasn't been updated in maybe a year:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/What-Is-WhatI go through these two a few times a day:
http://lifehacker.com/software/top/index.xml
http://www.instructables.com/tag/type:id/featured:true/rss.xml -
Re:Debian Package a Day
First thing every morning:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/DilbertDailyStripI found this one on
/. but it hasn't been updated in maybe a year:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/What-Is-WhatI go through these two a few times a day:
http://lifehacker.com/software/top/index.xml
http://www.instructables.com/tag/type:id/featured:true/rss.xml