[Web4lib] Re: RSS

Jimmy Ghaphery jghapher at vcu.edu
Mon Aug 8 12:28:27 EDT 2005


I'll chime in about the What's New area. We too make our What's New 
items available via RSS. One of the early benefits of this was that our 
University Portal was able to consume this and publish it to the library 
section of the campus-wide portal.

 From the other perspective, we have also had some success using our 
University's blogging software which of course creates an RSS feed. We 
are able to grab this feed ourselves and publish it onto selected webpages.

So with RSS you are able to write the information in a single place but 
syndicate it to multiple environments. Your RSS audience is not merely 
limited to individuals who have RSS readers.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jimmy Ghaphery                      email: jghapher at vcu.edu
Library Information Systems         tel.: 804-828-0032
VCU Libraries                       fax: 804-828-0151
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, VA USA 23284-2033
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> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 8 Aug 2005 08:36:05 -0700
> From: "Houghton, Sarah" <SHoughton at co.marin.ca.us>
> Subject: RE: [Web4lib] RSS
> To: "Rose Pose" <jequ1e at yahoo.com>, <web4lib at webjunction.org>
> Message-ID:
> 	<43CCBAE21D63614C806E5B60947CBF380454BA81 at EVS01.co.marin.ca.us>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
> 
> There are two main areas that I think of when I consider RSS and libraries.  And I'm sure I'm forgetting stuff, so anybody jump in at any time here...
> 
> 1) RSS & your patrons.  The simplest way to add RSS to your services is to have a frequently updated weblog with "what's new" at your library--and to have RSS feeds for that weblog.  I'll offer up my library's blog as an example: http://www.marincountyfreelibrary.blogspot.com/.  We don't really call it a blog, but simply link from a "What's New @ the Library" button on our homepage (http://www.co.marin.ca.us/library).  Here's a great list of library and librarian weblogs: http://www.libdex.com/weblogs.html  You can also do magnificent things with RSS in your catalog (new item alerts based on interests, new entries in subject guides, etc.).  The Hennepin County Library is an excellent example of this: http://www.hclib.org/pub/search/RSS.cfm  Finally, you can have a website full of individual area blogs with RSS feeds, like the Ann Arbor District Library has created with their recent website re-design: http://www.aadl.org/
> 
> 2) RSS & the library staff.  There are hundreds of library & information science weblogs with RSS feeds.  Get a nearly comprehensive list of libraries and librarians with blogs at: http://www.libdex.com/weblogs.html Reading these (through RSS feeds, or not) is a great way to stay up to date on issues facing the library world...and not just technology issues, either!  Many of the political battles, ethical issues, and ALA headline news stories appear first in the blogosphere before they make it into print media. RSS is a wonderful tool to use to stay professionally current.
> 
> My two cents,
> Sarah
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: web4lib-bounces at webjunction.org
> [mailto:web4lib-bounces at webjunction.org]On Behalf Of Rose Pose
> Sent: Monday, August 08, 2005 7:24 AM
> To: web4lib at webjunction.org
> Subject: [Web4lib] RSS
> 
> 
> Can anyone tell me how RSS can improve library services? Thank you
\
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jimmy Ghaphery                      email: jghapher at vcu.edu
Library Information Systems         tel.: 804-828-0032
VCU Libraries                       fax: 804-828-0151
Virginia Commonwealth University
Richmond, VA USA 23284-2033
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


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