Duke University Library RSS Feeds
December 28, 2007Duke University Library - North Carolina, USA. RSS feeds page
A service from The RSS Compendium
Duke University Library - North Carolina, USA. RSS feeds page
Marshall Kirkpatrick writes: “This past year was a big one for RSS. RSS, or Really Simple Syndication, was the backbone of all early developments in the new era of the internet. It made blogs readable, podcasts subscribable, wikis trackable and search persistent. While explicit, knowing adoption of RSS is often said to be dismal (”it’s too complicated, it’s just more info overload” etc.) - I think we may be underestimating the extent of adoption. Here’s my list of highlights from 2007, what’s yours?”
Medical Research Council - a publicly-funded organisation dedicated to improving human health. We support research across the entire spectrum of medical sciences, in universities and hospitals, in our own units and institutes in the UK, and in our units in Africa. RSS feeds page
Guardian Jobs - from Guardian News and Media, UK. RSS feeds page
Canadian LIbrary Association RSS feeds page
CNW Group - Canada’s number one resource for time-critical news and information from more than 10,000 sources coast to coast and around the world. Public companies, associations, unions, not-for-profits, municipal, provincial and federal governments all rely on CNW Group’s unique multi-media communication services and networks to effectively send their messages to newsrooms, the financial community and the public. RSS feeds page
informaworld - All journals from Taylor & Francis, Routledge and Psychology Press. Over 180 Informa Healthcare journals. Selected encyclopedias (the former Dekker encyclopedia collection) from Taylor & Francis and Informa Healthcare. All Taylor & Francis abstract databases. More than 10,000 eBooks from Taylor & Francis, Routledge and Informa Healthcare. RSS feeds page
Intute - a free online service providing access to the very best web resources for education and research. RSS feeds page
Daily Express - United Kingdom. RSS feeds page
Ian Winship writes: Inderscience has introduced the facility to receive tables of contents of individual journals in a browser or a newsreader like Bloglines or Google Reader using RSS technology. Contents are available for the latest issue of all published titles - currently 189 journals, with many others in various stages of preparation. Previously a feed was available only for all new articles, but now users can choose just the journals of interest. This RSS delivery is an alternative to the tables of contents by email alerting service. Links are available to the full text of articles for subscribers - other users can pay for individual articles. From a journal homepage users should click on the orange RSS icon or the Latest TOC link - or copy the underlying URL - and follow appropriate procedures to add to their list of RSS feeds