Instructions on How to Subscribe to a Feed
What Do I Need?
Just like when you want to watch a video clip or
listen to music on the web, you need a "player" of some
kind to subscribe to feeds. Good news: Most of these
tools are free, and there are many to choose from, so
you can find the one that best suits you.
The "player" for a feed is called a feed
reader. This tool lets you subscribe to any
feeds you want, checks automatically to see when they're
updated, and then displays the updates for you as they
arrive.
Feed readers can run on your computer or you can sign
up to use a feed-reader that runs on the web. If you use
one of the web-based readers, you can access your feeds
from anywhere you go, just by signing into the website
that manages your feeds. If you use a feed reading
program that installs on your computer, your feeds can
be stored for you even if you're not connected to the
Internet.
What Feed Reader Should I Use?
Here's a list some of the most popular tools our
customers have told us they like.
On the web: If you don't want to
have to install a program, many people choose
My Yahoo!,
Google Personalized
Homepage, My MSN,
or My AOL to read
feeds right within the home page that their browser
starts in. Other providers of web-based feed readers
include Rojo.
Bloglines,
Attensa Online, or
NewsGator Online.
All of the web-based services are free. Or, you can use
LiveJournal,
which is a blogging community that also lets you read
feeds on your friends page.
On your computer: If you want a feed
reading program that runs on your own computer, there
are a few options. Anyone using the
Mozilla Firefox
web browser has support for feeds built-in, and
Microsoft Windows users have support for feeds in
Internet
Explorer 7. Apple Macintosh users can also use the
built-in support for feeds in the
Safari web browser.
If you want a separate program to read feeds, you can
use
FeedDemon or
NewsGator for Microsoft Outlook or
Attensa for Outlook if you're on Microsoft Windows.
Both tools let you switch between these programs and the
web-based reader at any time. If you're on a Macintosh
running OS X, the most popular feed reader is
NetNewsWire,
which can also connect to the web-based services.