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News aggregator

In computing, a news aggregator, also termed a feed aggregator, content aggregator, feed reader, news reader, or simply an aggregator, is client software or a web application that aggregates digital content such as online newspapers, blogs, podcasts, and video blogs (vlogs) in one location for easy viewing. The updates distributed may include journal tables of contents, podcasts, videos, and news items.[1]

The user interface of the feed reader Tiny Tiny RSS

Contemporary news aggregators include Microsoft Start, Yahoo! News, Feedly, Inoreader, and Mozilla Thunderbird.

Function edit

 
The common web feed icon

Aggregation technology often consolidates (sometimes syndicated) web content into one page that can show only the new or updated information from many sites. Aggregators reduce the time and effort needed to regularly check websites for updates, creating a unique information space or personal newspaper. Once subscribed to a feed, an aggregator is able to check for new content at user-determined intervals and retrieve the update. The content is sometimes described as being pulled to the subscriber, as opposed to pushed with email or IM. Unlike recipients of some push information, the aggregator user can easily unsubscribe from a feed. The feeds are often in the RSS or Atom formats which use Extensible Markup Language (XML) to structure pieces of information to be aggregated in a feed reader that displays the information in a user-friendly interface.[1] Before subscribing to a feed, users have to install either "feed reader" or "news aggregator" applications in order to read it. The aggregator provides a consolidated view of the content in one browser display or desktop application. "Desktop applications offer the advantages of a potentially richer user interface and of being able to provide some content even when the computer is not connected to the Internet. Web-based feed readers offer the great convenience of allowing users to access up-to-date feeds from any Internet-connected computer."[2] Although some applications will have an automated process to subscribe to a news feed, the basic way to subscribe is by simply clicking on the web feed icon and/or text link.[2] Aggregation features are frequently built into web portal sites, in the web browsers themselves, in email applications, or in application software designed specifically for reading feeds. Aggregators with podcasting capabilities can automatically download media files, such as MP3 recordings. In some cases, these can be automatically loaded onto portable media players (like iPods) when they are connected to the end-users computer. By 2011, so-called RSS narrators appeared, which aggregated text-only news feeds, and converted them into audio recordings for offline listening. The syndicated content an aggregator will retrieve and interpret is usually supplied in the form of RSS or other XML-formatted data, such as RDF/XML or Atom.

History edit

RSS began in 1999 "when it was first introduced by Internet browser pioneer Netscape".[2] In the beginning, RSS was not a user-friendly gadget and it took some years to spread. "...RDF-based data model that people inside Netscape felt was too complicated for end users."[3] The rise of RSS began in the early 2000s when the New York Times implemented RSS: "One of the first, most popular sites that offered users the option to subscribe to RSS feeds was the New York Times, and the company's implementation of the format was revered as the 'tipping point' that cemented RSS's position as a de facto standard."[4] "In 2005, major players in the web browser market started integrating the technology directly into their products, including Microsoft's Internet Explorer, Mozilla's Firefox and Apple's Safari." As of 2015, according to BuiltWith.com, there were 20,516,036 live websites using RSS.[5]

Types edit

Web aggregators gather material from a variety of sources for display in one location. They may additionally process the information after retrieval for individual clients.[6] For instance, Google News gathers and publishes material independent of customers' needs while Awasu[7] is created as an individual RSS tool to control and collect information according to clients' criteria. There are a variety of software applications and components available to collect, format, translate, and republish XML feeds, a demonstration of presentation-independent data.[citation needed]

News aggregation websites edit

A news aggregator provides and updates information from different sources in a systematized way. "Some news aggregator services also provide update services, whereby a user is regularly updated with the latest news on a chosen topic".[6] Websites such as Google News, Yahoo News, Bing News, and NewsNow where aggregation is entirely automatic, using algorithms which carry out contextual analysis and group similar stories together.[8] Websites such as Drudge Report and HuffPost supplement aggregated news headline RSS feeds from a number of reputable mainstream and alternative news outlets, while including their own articles in a separate section of the website.[9]

News aggregation websites began with content selected and entered by humans, while automated selection algorithms were eventually developed to fill the content from a range of either automatically selected or manually added sources. Google News launched in 2002 using automated story selection, but humans could add sources to its search engine, while the older Yahoo News, as of 2005, used a combination of automated news crawlers and human editors.[10][11][12]

Web-based feed readers edit

Web-based feeds readers allow users to find a web feed on the internet and add it to their feed reader. These are meant for personal use and are hosted on remote servers. Because the application is available via the web, it can be accessed anywhere by a user with an internet connection. There are even more specified web-based RSS readers.[13]

More advanced methods of aggregating feeds are provided via Ajax coding techniques and XML components called web widgets. Ranging from full-fledged applications to small fragments of source code that can be integrated into larger programs, they allow users to aggregate OPML files, email services, documents, or feeds into one interface. Many customizable homepage and portal implementations provide such functionality.

In addition to aggregator services mainly for individual use, there are web applications that can be used to aggregate several blogs into one. One such variety—called planet sites—are used by online communities to aggregate community blogs in a centralized location. They are named after the Planet aggregator, a server application designed for this purpose.

Feed reader applications edit

Feed aggregation applications are installed on a PC, smartphone or tablet computer and designed to collect news and interest feed subscriptions and group them together using a user-friendly interface. The graphical user interface of such applications often closely resembles that of popular e-mail clients, using a three-panel composition in which subscriptions are grouped in a frame on the left, and individual entries are browsed, selected, and read in frames on the right.

Software aggregators can also take the form of news tickers which scroll feeds like ticker tape, alerters that display updates in windows as they are refreshed, web browser macro tools or as smaller components (sometimes called plugins or extensions), which can integrate feeds into the operating system or software applications such as a web browser.

Social news aggregators edit

Social news aggregators collect the most popular stories on the Internet, selected, edited, and proposed by a wide range of people. "In these social news aggregators, users submit news items (referred to as "stories"), communicate with peers through direct messages and comments, and collaboratively select and rate submitted stories to get to a real-time compilation of what is currently perceived as "hot" and popular on the Internet."[14] Social news aggregators are based on engagement of community. Their responses, engagement level, and contribution to stories create the content and determine what will be generated as RSS feed.

Frame- and media-bias–aware news aggregators edit

Media bias and framing are concepts that fundamentally explain deliberate or accidental differences in news coverage. A simple example is comparing media coverage of a topic in two countries, which are in (armed) conflict with another: one can easily imagine that news outlets, particularly if state-controlled, will report differently or even contrarily on the same events (for instance, the Russo-Ukrainian War). While media bias and framing have been subject to manual research for a couple of decades in the social sciences, only recently have automated methods and systems been proposed to analyze and show such differences. Such systems make use of text-features, e.g., news aggregators that extract key phrases that describe a topic differently, or other features, such as matrix-based news aggregation, which spans a matrix over two dimensions, the first dimension being which country an article was published in, and the second being which country it is reporting on.[15][16]

Media aggregators edit

Media aggregators are sometimes referred to as podcatchers due to the popularity of the term podcast used to refer to a web feed containing audio or video. Media aggregators are client software or web-based applications which maintain subscriptions to feeds that contain audio or video media enclosures. They can be used to automatically download media, playback the media within the application interface, or synchronize media content with a portable media player. Multimedia aggregators are the current focus. EU launched the project Reveal This to embedded different media platforms in RSS system. "Integrated infrastructure that will allow the user to capture, store, semantically index, categorize and retrieve multimedia, and multilingual digital content across different sources – TV, radio, music, web, etc. The system will allow the user to personalize the service and will have semantic search, retrieval, summarization."[6]

Broadcatching edit

Broadcatching is a mechanism that automatically downloads BitTorrent files advertised through RSS feeds.[17] Several BitTorrent client software applications such as Azureus and μTorrent have added the ability to broadcatch torrents of distributed multimedia through the aggregation of web feeds.

Feed filtering edit

One of the problems with news aggregators is that the volume of articles can sometimes be overwhelming, especially when the user has many web feed subscriptions. As a solution, many feed readers allow users to tag each feed with one or more keywords which can be used to sort and filter the available articles into easily navigable categories. Another option is to import the user's Attention Profile to filter items based on their relevance to the user's interests.

RSS and marketing edit

Some bloggers predicted the death of RSS when Google Reader was shut down.[18][19] Later, however, RSS was considered more of a success as an appealing way to obtain information. "Feedly, likely the most popular RSS reader today, has gone from around 5,000 paid subscribers in 2013 to around 50,000 paid subscribers in early 2015 – that's a 900% increase for Feedly in two years."[20] Customers use RSS to get information more easily while businesses take advantage of being able to spread announcements. "RSS serves as a delivery mechanism for websites to push online content to potential users and as an information aggregator and filter for users."[21] However, it has been pointed out that in order to push the content RSS should be user-friendly to ensure[22] proactive interaction so that the user can remain engaged without feeling "trapped", good design to avoid being overwhelmed by stale data, and optimization for both desktop and mobile use. RSS has a positive impact on marketing since it contributes to better search engine rankings, to building and maintaining brand awareness, and increasing site traffic.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Miles, Alisha (2009). "RIP RSS: Reviving Innovative Programs through Really Savvy Services". Journal of Hospital Librarianship. 9 (4): 425–432. doi:10.1080/15323260903253753. S2CID 71547323.
  2. ^ a b c Doree, Jim (1 January 2007). "RSS: A Brief Introduction". The Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy. 15 (1): 57–58. doi:10.1179/106698107791090169. ISSN 1066-9817. PMC 2565593. PMID 19066644.
  3. ^ Hammersley, Ben (2005). Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom. Sebastopol: O'Reilly Media, Inc. ISBN 978-0-596-00881-9.
  4. ^ "Google Reader is dead but the race to replace the RSS feed is very alive". Digital Trends. July 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  5. ^ "RSS Usage Statistics". trends.builtwith.com. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Chowdhury, Sudatta; Landoni, Monica (2006). "News aggregator services: user expectations and experience". Online Information Review. 30 (2): 100–115. doi:10.1108/14684520610659157.
  7. ^ "Welcome to Awasu". www.Awasu.com. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  8. ^ "Google News and newspaper publishers: allies or enemies?". Editorsweblog.org. World Editors Forum. Retrieved 31 March 2009.
  9. ^ Luscombe, Belinda (19 March 2009). . Time. Time Inc. Archived from the original on 21 March 2009. Retrieved 30 March 2009. The Huffington Post was to have three basic functions: blog, news aggregator with an attitude and place for premoderated comments.
  10. ^ Hansell, Saul (24 September 2002). "All the news Google algorithms say is fit to print". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 January 2014.
  11. ^ Hill, Brad (24 October 2005). Google Search & Rescue For Dummies. John Wiley & Sons. p. 85. ISBN 978-0-471-75811-2.
  12. ^ LiCalzi O'Connell, Pamela (29 January 2001). "New Economy; Yahoo Charts the Spread of the News by E-Mail, and What It Finds Out Is Itself Becoming News". New York Times.
  13. ^ Butler, Declan (25 June 2008). "Scientists get online news aggregator". Nature News. 453 (7199): 1149. doi:10.1038/4531149b. PMID 18580906. S2CID 205037759.
  14. ^ Doerr, Christian; Blenn, Norbert; Tang, Siyu; Van Mieghem, Piet (2012). "Are Friends Overrated? A Study for the Social News Aggregator Digg.com". Computer Communications. 35 (7): 796–809. arXiv:1304.2974. doi:10.1016/j.comcom.2012.02.001. ISSN 0140-3664. S2CID 15187700.
  15. ^ Felix Hamborg, Norman Meuschke, and Bela Gipp, Matrix-based News Aggregation: Exploring Different News Perspectives in Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE-CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries (JCDL), 2017.
  16. ^ Felix Hamborg, Norman Meuschke and Bela Gipp, Bias-aware News Analysis using Matrix-based News Aggregation in the International Journal on Digital Libraries (IJDL), 2018.
  17. ^ Zhang, Zengbin; Lin, Yuan; Chen, Yang; Xiong, Yongqiang; Shen, Jacky; Liu, Hongqiang; Deng, Beixing; Li, Xing (2009). "Experimental Study of Broadcatching in BitTorrent". 2009 6th IEEE Consumer Communications and Networking Conference. pp. 1–5. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.433.6539. doi:10.1109/CCNC.2009.4784862. ISBN 978-1-4244-2308-8. S2CID 342057.
  18. ^ "R.I.P. RSS? Google to shut down Google Reader". www.Gizmag.com. 14 March 2013. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  19. ^ Olanoff, Drew. "Google Reader's Death Is Proof That RSS Always Suffered From Lack Of Consumer Appeal". Techcrunch. Retrieved 27 October 2017.
  20. ^ "Is RSS Dead? A Look At The Numbers". MakeUseOf. 25 March 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  21. ^ Ma, Dan (1 December 2012). "Use of RSS feeds to push online content to users". Decision Support Systems. 54 (1): 740–749. doi:10.1016/j.dss.2012.09.002.
  22. ^ "Google Reader is dead but the race to replace the RSS feed is very alive". Digital Trends. July 2013. Retrieved 21 December 2015.
  23. ^ Hammersley, Ben (2005). Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom. California: O'Reilly Media, Inc. pp. 11. ISBN 9780596519001.

External links edit

news, aggregator, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, written, like, personal, reflection, personal, essay, argumentative, essay, that, state. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article is written like a personal reflection personal essay or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor s personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic Please help improve it by rewriting it in an encyclopedic style June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In computing a news aggregator also termed a feed aggregator content aggregator feed reader news reader or simply an aggregator is client software or a web application that aggregates digital content such as online newspapers blogs podcasts and video blogs vlogs in one location for easy viewing The updates distributed may include journal tables of contents podcasts videos and news items 1 The user interface of the feed reader Tiny Tiny RSSContemporary news aggregators include Microsoft Start Yahoo News Feedly Inoreader and Mozilla Thunderbird Contents 1 Function 2 History 3 Types 3 1 News aggregation websites 3 2 Web based feed readers 3 3 Feed reader applications 3 4 Social news aggregators 3 5 Frame and media bias aware news aggregators 4 Media aggregators 5 Broadcatching 6 Feed filtering 7 RSS and marketing 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksFunction edit nbsp The common web feed iconAggregation technology often consolidates sometimes syndicated web content into one page that can show only the new or updated information from many sites Aggregators reduce the time and effort needed to regularly check websites for updates creating a unique information space or personal newspaper Once subscribed to a feed an aggregator is able to check for new content at user determined intervals and retrieve the update The content is sometimes described as being pulled to the subscriber as opposed to pushed with email or IM Unlike recipients of some push information the aggregator user can easily unsubscribe from a feed The feeds are often in the RSS or Atom formats which use Extensible Markup Language XML to structure pieces of information to be aggregated in a feed reader that displays the information in a user friendly interface 1 Before subscribing to a feed users have to install either feed reader or news aggregator applications in order to read it The aggregator provides a consolidated view of the content in one browser display or desktop application Desktop applications offer the advantages of a potentially richer user interface and of being able to provide some content even when the computer is not connected to the Internet Web based feed readers offer the great convenience of allowing users to access up to date feeds from any Internet connected computer 2 Although some applications will have an automated process to subscribe to a news feed the basic way to subscribe is by simply clicking on the web feed icon and or text link 2 Aggregation features are frequently built into web portal sites in the web browsers themselves in email applications or in application software designed specifically for reading feeds Aggregators with podcasting capabilities can automatically download media files such as MP3 recordings In some cases these can be automatically loaded onto portable media players like iPods when they are connected to the end users computer By 2011 so called RSS narrators appeared which aggregated text only news feeds and converted them into audio recordings for offline listening The syndicated content an aggregator will retrieve and interpret is usually supplied in the form of RSS or other XML formatted data such as RDF XML or Atom History editRSS began in 1999 when it was first introduced by Internet browser pioneer Netscape 2 In the beginning RSS was not a user friendly gadget and it took some years to spread RDF based data model that people inside Netscape felt was too complicated for end users 3 The rise of RSS began in the early 2000s when the New York Times implemented RSS One of the first most popular sites that offered users the option to subscribe to RSS feeds was the New York Times and the company s implementation of the format was revered as the tipping point that cemented RSS s position as a de facto standard 4 In 2005 major players in the web browser market started integrating the technology directly into their products including Microsoft s Internet Explorer Mozilla s Firefox and Apple s Safari As of 2015 update according to BuiltWith com there were 20 516 036 live websites using RSS 5 Types editWeb aggregators gather material from a variety of sources for display in one location They may additionally process the information after retrieval for individual clients 6 For instance Google News gathers and publishes material independent of customers needs while Awasu 7 is created as an individual RSS tool to control and collect information according to clients criteria There are a variety of software applications and components available to collect format translate and republish XML feeds a demonstration of presentation independent data citation needed News aggregation websites edit A news aggregator provides and updates information from different sources in a systematized way Some news aggregator services also provide update services whereby a user is regularly updated with the latest news on a chosen topic 6 Websites such as Google News Yahoo News Bing News and NewsNow where aggregation is entirely automatic using algorithms which carry out contextual analysis and group similar stories together 8 Websites such as Drudge Report and HuffPost supplement aggregated news headline RSS feeds from a number of reputable mainstream and alternative news outlets while including their own articles in a separate section of the website 9 News aggregation websites began with content selected and entered by humans while automated selection algorithms were eventually developed to fill the content from a range of either automatically selected or manually added sources Google News launched in 2002 using automated story selection but humans could add sources to its search engine while the older Yahoo News as of 2005 used a combination of automated news crawlers and human editors 10 11 12 Web based feed readers edit Web based feeds readers allow users to find a web feed on the internet and add it to their feed reader These are meant for personal use and are hosted on remote servers Because the application is available via the web it can be accessed anywhere by a user with an internet connection There are even more specified web based RSS readers 13 More advanced methods of aggregating feeds are provided via Ajax coding techniques and XML components called web widgets Ranging from full fledged applications to small fragments of source code that can be integrated into larger programs they allow users to aggregate OPML files email services documents or feeds into one interface Many customizable homepage and portal implementations provide such functionality In addition to aggregator services mainly for individual use there are web applications that can be used to aggregate several blogs into one One such variety called planet sites are used by online communities to aggregate community blogs in a centralized location They are named after the Planet aggregator a server application designed for this purpose Feed reader applications edit Main article Comparison of feed aggregators Feed aggregation applications are installed on a PC smartphone or tablet computer and designed to collect news and interest feed subscriptions and group them together using a user friendly interface The graphical user interface of such applications often closely resembles that of popular e mail clients using a three panel composition in which subscriptions are grouped in a frame on the left and individual entries are browsed selected and read in frames on the right Software aggregators can also take the form of news tickers which scroll feeds like ticker tape alerters that display updates in windows as they are refreshed web browser macro tools or as smaller components sometimes called plugins or extensions which can integrate feeds into the operating system or software applications such as a web browser Social news aggregators edit Main article Social news website Social news aggregators collect the most popular stories on the Internet selected edited and proposed by a wide range of people In these social news aggregators users submit news items referred to as stories communicate with peers through direct messages and comments and collaboratively select and rate submitted stories to get to a real time compilation of what is currently perceived as hot and popular on the Internet 14 Social news aggregators are based on engagement of community Their responses engagement level and contribution to stories create the content and determine what will be generated as RSS feed Frame and media bias aware news aggregators edit Media bias and framing are concepts that fundamentally explain deliberate or accidental differences in news coverage A simple example is comparing media coverage of a topic in two countries which are in armed conflict with another one can easily imagine that news outlets particularly if state controlled will report differently or even contrarily on the same events for instance the Russo Ukrainian War While media bias and framing have been subject to manual research for a couple of decades in the social sciences only recently have automated methods and systems been proposed to analyze and show such differences Such systems make use of text features e g news aggregators that extract key phrases that describe a topic differently or other features such as matrix based news aggregation which spans a matrix over two dimensions the first dimension being which country an article was published in and the second being which country it is reporting on 15 16 Media aggregators editMedia aggregators are sometimes referred to as podcatchers due to the popularity of the term podcast used to refer to a web feed containing audio or video Media aggregators are client software or web based applications which maintain subscriptions to feeds that contain audio or video media enclosures They can be used to automatically download media playback the media within the application interface or synchronize media content with a portable media player Multimedia aggregators are the current focus EU launched the project Reveal This to embedded different media platforms in RSS system Integrated infrastructure that will allow the user to capture store semantically index categorize and retrieve multimedia and multilingual digital content across different sources TV radio music web etc The system will allow the user to personalize the service and will have semantic search retrieval summarization 6 Broadcatching editBroadcatching is a mechanism that automatically downloads BitTorrent files advertised through RSS feeds 17 Several BitTorrent client software applications such as Azureus and mTorrent have added the ability to broadcatch torrents of distributed multimedia through the aggregation of web feeds Feed filtering editOne of the problems with news aggregators is that the volume of articles can sometimes be overwhelming especially when the user has many web feed subscriptions As a solution many feed readers allow users to tag each feed with one or more keywords which can be used to sort and filter the available articles into easily navigable categories Another option is to import the user s Attention Profile to filter items based on their relevance to the user s interests RSS and marketing editSome bloggers predicted the death of RSS when Google Reader was shut down 18 19 Later however RSS was considered more of a success as an appealing way to obtain information Feedly likely the most popular RSS reader today has gone from around 5 000 paid subscribers in 2013 to around 50 000 paid subscribers in early 2015 that s a 900 increase for Feedly in two years 20 Customers use RSS to get information more easily while businesses take advantage of being able to spread announcements RSS serves as a delivery mechanism for websites to push online content to potential users and as an information aggregator and filter for users 21 However it has been pointed out that in order to push the content RSS should be user friendly to ensure 22 proactive interaction so that the user can remain engaged without feeling trapped good design to avoid being overwhelmed by stale data and optimization for both desktop and mobile use RSS has a positive impact on marketing since it contributes to better search engine rankings to building and maintaining brand awareness and increasing site traffic 23 See also editComparison of feed aggregators History of web syndication technology Lifestreaming Metasearch engine Social media Social network aggregation Web feed Web syndicationReferences edit a b Miles Alisha 2009 RIP RSS Reviving Innovative Programs through Really Savvy Services Journal of Hospital Librarianship 9 4 425 432 doi 10 1080 15323260903253753 S2CID 71547323 a b c Doree Jim 1 January 2007 RSS A Brief Introduction The Journal of Manual amp Manipulative Therapy 15 1 57 58 doi 10 1179 106698107791090169 ISSN 1066 9817 PMC 2565593 PMID 19066644 Hammersley Ben 2005 Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom Sebastopol O Reilly Media Inc ISBN 978 0 596 00881 9 Google Reader is dead but the race to replace the RSS feed is very alive Digital Trends July 2013 Retrieved 21 December 2015 RSS Usage Statistics trends builtwith com Retrieved 21 December 2015 a b c Chowdhury Sudatta Landoni Monica 2006 News aggregator services user expectations and experience Online Information Review 30 2 100 115 doi 10 1108 14684520610659157 Welcome to Awasu www Awasu com Retrieved 27 October 2017 Google News and newspaper publishers allies or enemies Editorsweblog org World Editors Forum Retrieved 31 March 2009 Luscombe Belinda 19 March 2009 Arianna Huffington The Web s New Oracle Time Time Inc Archived from the original on 21 March 2009 Retrieved 30 March 2009 The Huffington Post was to have three basic functions blog news aggregator with an attitude and place for premoderated comments Hansell Saul 24 September 2002 All the news Google algorithms say is fit to print The New York Times Retrieved 20 January 2014 Hill Brad 24 October 2005 Google Search amp Rescue For Dummies John Wiley amp Sons p 85 ISBN 978 0 471 75811 2 LiCalzi O Connell Pamela 29 January 2001 New Economy Yahoo Charts the Spread of the News by E Mail and What It Finds Out Is Itself Becoming News New York Times Butler Declan 25 June 2008 Scientists get online news aggregator Nature News 453 7199 1149 doi 10 1038 4531149b PMID 18580906 S2CID 205037759 Doerr Christian Blenn Norbert Tang Siyu Van Mieghem Piet 2012 Are Friends Overrated A Study for the Social News Aggregator Digg com Computer Communications 35 7 796 809 arXiv 1304 2974 doi 10 1016 j comcom 2012 02 001 ISSN 0140 3664 S2CID 15187700 Felix Hamborg Norman Meuschke and Bela Gipp Matrix based News Aggregation Exploring Different News Perspectives in Proceedings of the ACM IEEE CS Joint Conference on Digital Libraries JCDL 2017 Felix Hamborg Norman Meuschke and Bela Gipp Bias aware News Analysis using Matrix based News Aggregation in the International Journal on Digital Libraries IJDL 2018 Zhang Zengbin Lin Yuan Chen Yang Xiong Yongqiang Shen Jacky Liu Hongqiang Deng Beixing Li Xing 2009 Experimental Study of Broadcatching in BitTorrent 2009 6th IEEE Consumer Communications and Networking Conference pp 1 5 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 433 6539 doi 10 1109 CCNC 2009 4784862 ISBN 978 1 4244 2308 8 S2CID 342057 R I P RSS Google to shut down Google Reader www Gizmag com 14 March 2013 Retrieved 27 October 2017 Olanoff Drew Google Reader s Death Is Proof That RSS Always Suffered From Lack Of Consumer Appeal Techcrunch Retrieved 27 October 2017 Is RSS Dead A Look At The Numbers MakeUseOf 25 March 2015 Retrieved 21 December 2015 Ma Dan 1 December 2012 Use of RSS feeds to push online content to users Decision Support Systems 54 1 740 749 doi 10 1016 j dss 2012 09 002 Google Reader is dead but the race to replace the RSS feed is very alive Digital Trends July 2013 Retrieved 21 December 2015 Hammersley Ben 2005 Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom California O Reilly Media Inc pp 11 ISBN 9780596519001 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to News aggregators nbsp Look up aggregator in Wiktionary the free dictionary Feed Readers at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title News aggregator amp oldid 1203791221, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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