The Inland Empire, San Bernardino & Riverside California

   The Inland Empire - Southern California's News Feeds

Inland Empire News Feeds - RSS and XML

Get Inland Empire headlines as soon as they are published. A great way to find all of the local information. This FAQ will show you how, and will answer some of the common questions about news feeds.

  1. What is a news feed?
  2. How do I subscribe to news feeds?
  3. Where can I find a list of all Inland Empire feeds?
  4. What is a news reader?
  5. Should I use a news reader?
  6. What is RSS?
  7. What is syndication?


What is a news feed?

A news feed,also known as an RSS feed, is a listing content. All news feeds will have a link back to the source, the website where it was created. If you see a headline / excerpt / story you like, you can click on the link for that piece of content and will be taken to the website to read it. News Feeds are updated whenever new content is published to the site.

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How do I subscribe to InlandEmpire.us news feeds?

Step one is to download your favorite news reader. If you have never used one before, try installing one of the news readers mentioned below and see which one you like.

Point your news reader to the addresses below for each feed you want to subscribe to.

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Where can I find a list of Inland Empire feeds?

You can find a complete list of Inland Empire news feeds over here, at http://www.inlandempire.us/feeds.php .

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What is a news reader?

A news reader or news aggregator, is simply a piece of software that you can use to read your subscribed news feeds. It is to news feeds what Outlook, Hotmail, and Entourage are to email.

News readers "subscribe" to news feeds, which means they download lists of stories at an interval that you specify (every 30 minutes, for example), and present them to you in your news reader. A news feed might contain a list of story headlines, a list of excerpts from the stories, or a list containing each story from the website

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Should I use a news reader?

If you visit a lot of websites on daily basis, or read a lot of weblogs (or "blogs"), a news reader can save you a lot of time. Using a news reader to consume your web media means that you only need to visit a website when you read a story in your news reader that is of interest to you. You won't have to visit many sites multiple times every day to see if there are updates; your news reader will do that for you and will let you know when there is a new story to be read!

So if you visit a lot of websites regularly, or want to be alerted automatically when your websites publishes a new story, using a news reader might make sense.

Some commonly used news readers are Feed Demon, Sharp Reader, and NewsGator (an Outlook plugin) for Windows, NetNewsWire and Shrook for Macs, and Bloglines.com for those who like web-based readers.

You can find even more news readers at itopik.com.

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What is RSS?

The acronym RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication".

The meaning of the acronym is not terribly important, however. An RSS feed (also known as a news feed) is a site's syndicated news feed that you subscribe to using your news reader.

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What is syndication?

Syndication refers to the process that occurs when a publisher provides content in a form that can be consumed by software (like a news reader).

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   Current Inland Empire News
2/8/2010 - Dutton Seeks Independent Review of State Air Board Actions

2/8/2010 - History Day at the John Rains House

2/5/2010 - Democrats' Debt Limit Increase Largest In American History

2/5/2010 - Arrowhead United Way Assists Low- to Moderate-Income Tax Filers

2/3/2010 - Index Fresh Hires Ann O'Neill As New National Sales Representative

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