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RSS — why grandma doesn't matter

RSS is becoming significant because main stream web sites allow users to subscribe to yours and others' RSS feeds. Neither you nor the user base need to understand RSS for this to be easy and work.

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What technology your grandmother understands is irrelevant to your web content strategy. In particular, you should ignore grandma's opinion about RSS. What you should pay attention to is this:

So, in a nutshell, the argument for RSS is this: (1) There's an expanding user base that is becoming significant because of main stream media involvement; (2) Neither you nor this user base need to understand any of RSS's technical niceties to subscribe to or provide relevant content. Rok Hrastnik and Chris Pirillo take heart.

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Bud posted this on April 15, 2005

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Listed below are links to weblogs that reference RSS — why grandma doesn't matter:

» Is RSS Mainstream? from Todd Kitta Unleashed
Bud discuss the ubiquitousness of RSS. RSS has been huge for a while now. All the while I consistently see blog posts and articles about how great it is and how everyone is using it. And I concur, RSS rocks.... [Read More]

Tracked on June 19, 2005 02:53 AM

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