Lee Taft would like you to believe that he’s too old to be a Weblogger.
If that’s true, Lee, Mark Traphagen is crying somewhere in Philly.
Lee Taft would like you to believe that he’s too old to be a Weblogger.
If that’s true, Lee, Mark Traphagen is crying somewhere in Philly.
Andy the Eagle says goodbye to Blogspot.
We say, “Welcome, Andy.”
NewsForge has a great article on how syndication feeds save time. That’s the main reason that I use feeds.
Syndication is gaining popularity with savvy Internet users as the way to keep up with the tide of information updates. Rather than manually browsing all of your bookmarked sites, you use a computer program to do all that boring work for you, and prepare a complete list of all the latest information. If a website hasn’t update yet, you don’t need to waste your time checking it. If all of your favorite websites have updated, you can read all of that fresh content in a single sitting, without waiting for the pages to load or looking at the annoying advertisements.
[rmfo-blogs.com], as users of WordPress, supplies its readers with syndication feeds out-of-the-box. [rmfo-blogs.com] users are also granted installations of the wonderful Feed on Feeds Web-based syndication aggregator by request.
Okay, so WordPress 1.2 has been released for months, but I finally got everyone [save for Peter, Bryan, and Joe] upgraded to it today.
Phew.
Brandon asks if it works. Yes, it does.
Because several have asked … there is no limit on rmfo-blogs. One just needs to ask me.