
Never Used RSS? Start Here.
You open your favorite app to catch up on the news. Thirty minutes later, you've watched two unrelated videos, scrolled past a dozen ads, and still haven't read the article your coworker mentioned. Sound familiar? Algorithmic feeds are designed to maximize engagement, not to inform you. They decide what you see, when you see it, and how long you stay. The result is a reading experience that feels busy but leaves you less informed. There's a better way, and it's been around for over two decades. RSS — Really Simple Syndication — is a quiet technology that puts you back in control. No algorithms. No ads. No tracking. Just the content you asked for, delivered the moment it's published. If you've never tried it, this guide will have you set up in under ten minutes. Photo by ubeyonroad on Unsplash What Is RSS, Actually? RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication. It's an open standard that lets websites publish updates in a structured format — a small file that lists the latest articles, post
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