New Features at Gop3.com: Feed Upgrade

Written by Brandon on January 17, 2007 – 12:36 pm -

Welcome, if you're new here, you may want to subscribe to our RSS feed or subscribe to our email newsletter. Thanks for visiting!

In order to make our news feed more compatible and easier to use we have now upgraded it. If you read Gop3.com through a news reader like hundreds of others, you can easily use any RSS reader or new aggregator. A digest of the latest Gop3.com Rapid Links (shown on the right side of the page above the Recent Readers), will also be added to your feed at the end of every day. To subscribe to Gop3.com with your news reader, simply click the “Subscribe in a reader” link on the right hand sidebar.

In addition, you can now click the Digg This! and Add to del.icio.us links at the end of each post if you like, so the post can be added to social bookmarking sites where others can see it.

As always, you can find all of the latest posts, comments and Rapid Links right here on gop3.com.

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Posted in Brave New World, Points of Personal Privilege |

2 Comments to “New Features at Gop3.com: Feed Upgrade”

  1. Google Reader: More blogs, less time at Conservative Times--Republican GOP news source. Says:

    [...] First, a little bit about the technology behind Google Reader. When I recently announced that our feed had been upgraded, I was referring to our RSS feed. RSS is short for Real Simple Syndication. Here is a quick description of RSS use from Wikipedia: Users of RSS content use programs called feed ‘readers’ or ‘aggregators’: the user ’subscribes’ to a feed by supplying to their reader a link to the feed; the reader can then check the user’s subscribed feeds to see if any of those feeds have new content since the last time it checked, and if so, retrieve that content and present it to the user. [...]

  2. Gop3.com: The Triumvirate » Blog Archive » Google Reader: More blogs, less time Says:

    [...] First, a little bit about the technology behind Google Reader. When I recently announced that our feed had been upgraded, I was referring to our RSS feed. RSS is short for Real Simple Syndication. Here is a quick description of RSS use from Wikipedia: Users of RSS content use programs called feed ‘readers’ or ‘aggregators’: the user ’subscribes’ to a feed by supplying to their reader a link to the feed; the reader can then check the user’s subscribed feeds to see if any of those feeds have new content since the last time it checked, and if so, retrieve that content and present it to the user. [...]

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