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Being Triathlon- Mae Lee warming up for tri in L.A. (on right)
mls@maeleesun.com
520.370.5013
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Being Triathlon- Mae Lee warming up for tri in L.A. (on right)
mls@maeleesun.com
520.370.5013
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
By DIAMOND and RIVER, March 10, 2009 @ 12:29 pm
Looks beautiful. Very inviting. Nice Job. D&R
By Musai, March 10, 2009 @ 1:53 pm
I love it! But how do I subscribe, and what does it mean to subscribe?
Musi
By maeleesun, March 10, 2009 @ 2:19 pm
Roshi,
I am in the process of learning the adminstration tasks associated with this software and will let you know as soon as I figure out how to enable the subscribe function. To subscribe means that when a new post comes in, it will automatically go to your email.
Stay tuned!
ML
By Dan, March 10, 2009 @ 5:54 pm
The web is filled with volumes of static. This has a nice vibe that welcomes insight and thoughtfulness.
By Karen & Mark, March 12, 2009 @ 7:50 am
ML,
Your writing is beautiful. Gives me encouragement to return to zen….
Karen
By tdrossi, March 16, 2009 @ 1:47 am
By subscribing you are adding this website to what is called an RSS feed. RSS has many definitions, but the most common is “Really Simple Syndicate”. You can read more about that here.
In essence, RSS allows you to subscribe to a website and view website stories, articles or “posts” throughout the web, without going directly to the website. Many use this to review a large number of websites in summary, and then click on a particular article to read at the specific website.
It works like this. In a blog or a news type website, each article is a “post”. Each post has a specific title, content and date. When you subscribe to the website RSS or feed, you use a software application that uses this RSS feed to go to each website you have subscribed to and it then “feeds” the articles or posts, to the RSS reader or even to your email application, such as Outlook.
You can find many RSS readers on the web, and some popular readers are NetNewsWire for Mac, and Sharpreader for Windows. Google has a feedreader as well.
So why use a feedreader and not just go to each site? Well, say you often read multiple websites each day. You like reading the NY Times, The Onion, Obama’s website and, of course, the Sun Spot. So, you download a feedreader, click on the “Subscribe to RSS” on each website, and then the reader will show you the latest articles on each website, right in one window.
Hope this is helpful…Timo
By Ginny Bonner, April 27, 2010 @ 6:15 pm
Mae Lee,
Your site is amazing! You are creating as you are being! You are an inspiration to all of us. Love and blessings your way! Gin