KELOLAND RSS FEEDS
Available Feeds
KELOLAND.com provides RSS feeds for instant access to news stories from a wide variety of topics. A listing of current feeds is below.Not Sure What RSS and XML Mean?
Scroll to the bottom of this page to learn more about RSS, including it's definition and how to use it.
- All KELOLAND.com Stories
- Healthbeat (ALL)
- News (ALL)
- Sports (ALL)
- Weather (ALL)
- KELOLAND.com Announcements
- KELOLAND.com Connections
- KELOLAND.com Blogs
What are RSS newsfeeds?
RSS stands for Rich Site Summary, or for Really Simple Syndication. Both mean the same thing, so don't let it confuse you. An RSS is something a website (or a blog) offers to readers provide a "news feed" of their information. Sites use XML to deliver RSS. It's available for everyone to add to their own "news reader" for free and gets displayed on your desktop or in your web browser.
It works almost like a stock ticker, delivering exactly the information that you have anonymously "subscribed" to, eliminating the need to go out and check your favorite outlets for new information, because they're already delivered to your computer.
Who needs RSS?
Well, everyone need it. It's so much more efficient than going to get it, especially if you want to save time looking for stories on particular topics. Using RSS, those individual stories will be delivered directly and automatically to your desktop.
How do I get started?
The feeds offers by KELOLAND.com are listed above. You'll also see XML buttons
on several web pages.
To get our feeds, simply right-click (Windows) or option-click (Macintosh) on the link. Select the option of "Copy Shortcut". Then, open your reader and paste in the URL.
Where can I get a News Reader?
A news reader, or aggregator, is the tool that is used to read and/or notify you of newly available information. There are a number of readers available with each offering different, yet similar, options, and many are free. Many news readers are applications that you download and install. Some others are a web-based service you sign-up for that works inside your browser. To find one, visit Google's list of News Readers or Yahoo's RSS resource page.
