
GTownTimes.com Web Feeds
What are Web Feeds?
In a world heaving under the weight of billions of web pages, keeping up to date with the information you want can be a drag.
Wouldn't it be better to have the latest news and features delivered directly to you, rather than clicking from site to site? Well now you can, thanks to a very clever service, web feeds.
Our feeds are built upon the RSS standards and can be used with any RSS reader. Put plainly, it allows you to identify the content you like and have it delivered directly to you.
It takes the hassle out of staying up-to-date, by showing you the very latest information that you are interested in.
How do I start using web feeds?
In general, the first thing you need is something called a news reader. There are many different versions, some of which are accessed using a browser, and some of which are downloadable applications. All allow you to display and subscribe to the web feeds you want.
Once you have chosen a news reader, all you have to do is to decide what content you want. For example, if you would like the latest JournalScene.com Entertainment
stories, simply click on the feed for the section you want.
If you click on the button you can subscribe to the feed in various ways, including by dragging the URL of the web feed into your news reader or by
putting and pasting the same URL into a new feed in your news reader.
Some browsers, including Firefox, Opera and Safari, have functionality which automatically picks up web feeds for you. For more details on these, please check their websites.
Daily Emails
- Most Viewed
- Most Commented
- Walker Inman, multi-millionaire heir of Duke fortune dead at 57
- Scoville: 'We definitely are not becoming a ghost town'
- Georgetown's finance director back at work
- New virus symptoms hit Strand, many are sick
- Two local churches mourn the loss of pastors; Funeral set for LC3 leader
- Higharket Street store owner charged with counterfeiting
- Whale dies on local beach
- Crews battle Maryville brush fire; No injuries and no homes damaged (Updated)
- Teen to spend life in prison for 2008 killing
- Felonly DUI charge in wreck that killed Pawleys woman
- Scoville: 'We definitely are not becoming a ghost town' (24)
- State ruling: Georgetown is discharging too much pollution into Sampit River (11)
- Georgetown's finance director back at work (11)
- Georgetown mayor to guest on National Public Radio show Friday morning (11)
- 200 LOCALS TO JOIN POLLUTION SUIT AGAINST IP (8)
- County jobless rate rises to 15.3% (8)
- Researcher: Local economy may not recover for years (7)
- Handcuffed man escapes custody; now back in jail (6)
- Sampit pollution: City tries to avoid big fines (5)
- Letters, March 5, 2010 (5)
