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Rssowl 2 user guide
Rssowl 2 user guide













rssowl 2 user guide
  1. #Rssowl 2 user guide mac os x#
  2. #Rssowl 2 user guide Offline#
  3. #Rssowl 2 user guide plus#
  4. #Rssowl 2 user guide series#
  5. #Rssowl 2 user guide zip#

Why "Owl"? The owl is a traditional symbol of wisdom, and a quiet, efficient hunter.

#Rssowl 2 user guide Offline#

It lets you gather, organize, update, and store information from any compliant source in a convenient, easy to use interface, save selected information in various formats for offline viewing and sharing, and much more. Applications that collect data from RSS-compliant sites are called RSS readers or "aggregators". RSS ("Really Simple Syndication" or "Rich Site Summary") is a document specification that gives users the power to collect and organize Web-based news and information in a more efficient manner. Personally, I'm going to stick with Google Reader for the moment, as the fact that it is web-based gives me more portability, but to those people who don't use a feed reader right now, or are looking for a change, I'd recommend you download RSSOwl and give it a try.RSSOwl is a free RSS / RDF / Atom Newsreader in Java using SWT as fast graphic library. While there are some areas in which RSSOwl could definitely improve in, overall I find it a very capable feed reader. Since then, I was pleasantly surprised with the amount of progress that has been made in making RSSOwl easier to use, faster, and particularly on Linux, easier to get started with and a better citizen on the Linux desktop.

#Rssowl 2 user guide series#

I actually have used RSSOwl in the past, back in the 1.x series in August 2006, and posted a review on Gizbuzz (a previous Oratos Media blog). I do have around 250 subscriptions, and I was pleasantly surprised with the speed at which they were imported, processed, and the items loaded into the client. My labels in Google Reader became folders in RSSOwl and within a minute or so, all my feeds were loaded in and the items displayed. In RSSOwl, I simply clicked File > Import Feeds and imported the file.

rssowl 2 user guide

I currently use Google Reader as my main feed reading solution, so I proceeded to export out my subscriptions as an OPML file. It works well, although with several hundred unread items the performance did suffer quite a bit and RSSOwl became a bit sluggish.

rssowl 2 user guide

The 'New and Updated News' group on the left gives you this view, and shows you, obviously, all unread items in the right-hand pane so you can go through them. If you're a fan of the 'river of news' metaphor, then RSSOwl won't disappoint there either. Reading items works in the way you expect it to, click an item and the bottom part of the right-hand pane and read it. Once you have done so, however, the feed items will be loaded in and you'll be able to select it from the source list at the left and see the items in the main pane. Coupled with the confusion of calling it a 'bookmark', this could prove very frustrating until you work out exactly what it means and even then might add an extra unnecessary step to adding a feed into your reader. Instead you have to put the direct feed URL in from the beginning (for example. One negative point here is that if you don't specify the direct feed URL (for example, just put down ), RSSOwl doesn't appear to actually go and auto-discover the real feed URL and fetch from there. Interestingly, it brands this as adding a bookmark - which might be a bit confusing for feed veterans, but might well make it easier to understand for those who are new to the whole concept.

#Rssowl 2 user guide plus#

As you'd expect, you click on the green plus in the toolbar. The list of feeds comes pre-populated with some that the developers have decided you'd like, but it's trivial to delete that whole set and either import your own feeds or add a new one.Īdding a new feed manually is pretty simple and intuitive. The interface is divided into two columns, with a list of feeds on the left and the main area on the right. Once RSSOwl loads, you're presented with a screen that looks something like this: You do however, need Java installed, no matter where you run it.

#Rssowl 2 user guide zip#

With the Linux version, it's a simple case of extracting the Zip file, and double-clicking the RSSOwl binary. You can quickly and easily download the right package for your operating system from the download page. Here, I'm reviewing version 2.0 Milestone 7 on Fedora 8, but the functionality should be identical wherever you run it.

#Rssowl 2 user guide mac os x#

RSSOwl is a Java-based application that is designed to run on pretty much all platforms - that includes Windows, Mac OS X and Linux distributions. Along with your email client and web browser, your feed reader is a hub of information. Feed readers are quickly becoming very important applications in people's daily workflows.















Rssowl 2 user guide