2 posts tagged “digg”
UPDATE: Do yourself a favor and use the newer Digg This! FeedFlare provided by FeedBurner. It's been added to the list of FeedFlares you can use right "out of the box" with no third-party monkey business.
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I’m continually honored to host the official “Digg this” FeedFlare on Feedburner’s web site, but with this great power comes responsibility. Namely, I need to keep this not broken (at a minimum) and updated (ideally). So, thanks to a heads up from a helpful guy named Joe, I am pleased to announce a small tweak to that which has garnered me such fame.
More specifically, the title of the post is now automatically populated when you submit a link. The arrival of Digg 3.0 brings with it increased capabilities in this area, as well as hope for a full API sometime soonish. Another improvement to the FeedFlare should make it behave better when you’re logged into Digg itself.
So, the update is out there now…please let me know if you have problems with it.
UPDATE: Do yourself a favor and use the newer Digg This! FeedFlare provided by FeedBurner. It's been added to the list of FeedFlares you can use right "out of the box" with no third-party monkey business.
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This one’s for all the bloggers out there.
If you have a blog, or publish any kind of information over an RSS feed, you should probably be using FeedBurner to manage your feed. In a nutshell, FeedBurner provides a boatload of free services to make dealing with your RSS feed easier.
My favorite example is something they call BrowserFriendly. As you may already know, your RSS feed itself is just an XML file. So, the “click here for my RSS feed” link you put on your blog is just a link to that file, or some mechanism that spits out that file. So, for someone who isn’t sure what RSS is, they may click that link and see a bunch of raw, ugly XML.
This happened to a friend of mine recently. (Honest to God.) He saw that I have a blog and asked me “what RSS is all about.” He said that when he clicks “the orange XML thing on these web sites, it doesn’t do anything.” FeedBurner’s BrowserFriendly feature solves this problem by showing the user a nicely styled version of the data in the XML file, along with some text explaining what subscribing to the feed is all about.
BrowserFriendly is just one (easy to understand) example. FeedBurner provides lots of other functionality as well, particularly if you’re a commercial publisher and you want to display ads in your feed. But, another fun service they provide is something called FeedFlare.
FeedFlare
FeedFlare is what provides the Email this, Subscribe to this feed, etc. links you see at the bottom of each post. Though you may be able to customize your blogging software to provide similar functionality, I think this is better because it automatically appears as part of your feed, wherever it’s being read.
In the past day or so, FeedBurner has opened up this service so that anyone can create their own FeedFlare item. They’ve also posted a list of 101 possible ideas for FeedFlare, and a call for people to create them. So, here’s my submission for #19…a little something I like to call Digg this. It’s not rocket science; just a quick little way to submit the current post to the digg.com tech news site, much in the same vein as the Add to del.icio.us links you see popping up on the web.
So, here’s hoping you take your feeds to the next level with FeedBurner, and write something cool enough to make it to the Digg home page!