If you want to subscribe to this blog via RSS, there’s a big blue button on the right side that says Subscribe by RSS. But I decided to keep it because it shows that the steps above also work when there is an RSS link but you’ve overlooked it. While writing this, I started to change my example since I was wrong about the site not displaying an RSS link. It’s in a menu under the + sign in the top right corner. Turns out there is a link to the RSS feed after all. If you open up the page source, you’ll find 31 references to RSS. Tacking /feed on the end doesn’t work, but does. You’ll see at the top how to subscribe by email, and you’ll see at the bottom links to Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and YouTube, but no RSS.ĭigg Reader was able to find the RSS feed from just the top level URL. There are browser plug-ins that will show when a page has RSS feeds.You may be able to find the RSS feed by looking at the HTML source of the front page.You can try adding /feed or /rss to the end of the domain.Your blog reader may be able to find the RSS from the site’s URL.There are several ways to find the RSS feed of a site that does not make this feed obvious. Blogging software still creates RSS feeds, though links to these feeds have become harder to find. This explains why Google would kill off the world’s most popular RSS reader.īlogs used to display an icon linking to the site’s RSS feed, and any still do. It also lets you read posts in peace, free from distracting peripheral ads.
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