Find Out How
Microsoft's Plans Could Make
Your Subscribers Beg You for Content via RSS!
By Kent Thompson
Hold on to you seats ezine owners! Microsoft recently announced that
they will be releasing a new browser version sometime this summer that
could revolutionize the way your subscribers want their content
delivered.
The new browser version was to be released with Longhorn, the code
name for their next operating system to replace Windows XP. But
Microsoft decided they needed to release it sooner than that.
Many think the reason is because Firefox, the popular new browser, has
some key features that many surfers have come to expect. These
features may have put pressure on Microsoft to respond with a browser
with similar specs.
One of these key features is tabbed browsing, which allows you to
browse to multiple sites using just one window with tabs rather than
opening a new window for each page.
But tabbed browsing isn't all...
I am really excited about the possibility of a new feature that could
change the way web-surfers get their content!
Although there has been no formal announcement about this, there has
been a lot of speculation about the new browser including a built-in
RSS aggregator.
An RSS what?
Let me explain...
RSS has taken off like a rocket. Blog sites love it, and every major
website out there now supports it including CNN, ESPN, Yahoo, Google,
and MSN.
RSS is nothing more than a format for delivering article headlines
that can be read and neatly displayed by RSS readers, much like an
email program displays email messages.
But so far the popularity of RSS has been confined mainly to blogsites
and tech-saavy individuals who know how to "tune in" to an RSS Feed.
Though it is spreading like wildfire, many average web users have no
idea what RSS is! (I've confirmed that by recently asking several of
my friends, and none of them had ever heard of it.)
This is all about to change!
Microsoft has very good reason to include an RSS reader with their new
IE version. If they don't, surfers may have reason to switch to
another browser that does. Firefox already includes an RSS reader.
If they DO include an RSS reader, think of the implications:
1) You could browse to a webpage and IE could "discover" any RSS links
on the page and notify you of them through the browser status bar or
elsewhere.
2) You may be able to Right-Click on an RSS Feed and have an option to
"Add to RSS Reader", which would instantly subscribe you to the Feed.
3) Web developers may be able to write web pages that allow visitors
to automatically subscribe to a feed by clicking a button or
submitting a form.
Remember, Firefox already has all these features, but the vast
majority still uses IE!
Once visitors learn how RSS works and figure out how easy and
convenient it is, RSS could quickly become the expected format for
ezines and newsletters.
Soon you may be forced to offer RSS content because subscribers will
not want to hand out their email address anymore!
The time will come...will you be ready to deliver via RSS?
Now you can deliver your autoresponder sequence through a personalized
RSS feed and email! Author and Programmer Kent Thompson makes this
way too easy with his new software. Check it out now at
http://feedmagic.com/fm/?&req=k&tc=5b5225