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Internet. Search. Four Really Good Free Desktop News Ticker Apps. How do you keep up with the latest news? And how do you weed out what you don’t care for? Do you scan the newspaper, visit different websites, or do you watch TV news? Isn’t that difficult and time consuming? A more convenient way is to bring all sources you care for together in one place. That could be a website or a RSS reader. In this article, I introduce four excellent and free desktop news ticker applications that will stream custom news right to your desktop. BBC Destkop News Ticker Application If you just want quality news from a reliable source and cannot be bothered to set up your own feeds, you’ll be very pleased with the BBC’s Desktop Ticker.

The ticker has two options. The hourly update contains a list of headlines in the menu on the left and a summary of the selected headline in the window to the right. From the system tray icon, you can open the Content Options window. Overall, this is a simple and convenient free desktop news ticker that is quick and easy to set up. Snackr. 2 Online Alternatives to Standard RSS Readers. Newswall allows you to create your own personalised magazine, hosted on your own webserver no less, consisting of the RSS feeds of your favourite sites. If you’d rather follow interesting topics as opposed to sites, Skeedy will come in handy. Newswall NewsWall, a free PHP script, allows you to host an RSS reader on your webserver, and is very easy to set up. Download the zip file, and upload its contents to the root folder of your webserver. Once you’ve uploaded the files, direct your browser to the URL ( and configure Newswall to display the RSS feeds of your choice.

You won’t have to fiddle with database settings, which makes it very easy for anyone who knows how to access an FTP server to install Newswall. The first time you launch it, you will be prompted to add RSS feeds, and from there you can also add IMAP or POP email accounts, and adjust your settings. From here you can continue to add new RSS feeds to your wall. Skeedy Image credit: Marius Auzelis. WizardRSS: Display Full RSS Feeds. By default, most of RSS feeds just take the first couple of lines of the content and display those to you. In order to read the whole thing, you have to go to the actual website. WizardRSS changes that by letting you display full RSS feeds of any content. To start, just enter any feed or website URL and WizardRSS will provide you with a new feed URL. A lot of people think that displaying full RSS feeds completely kills the purpose of having feeds in the first place.

Well, it might be true in some cases but there are many situations where you need to use the feeds just to automate publishing and what you really want to display is the complete article. It has a dead simple interface and takes less than 5 seconds to generate a new feed. Features: Display complete articles/posts in RSS feeds.No-hassle interface.Choose between ATOM and RSS.No registration required.Similar tools: FiveFilter. Newsmap – Free Online News Reader that Adds New Dimension To Your News. Information is always changing. Every second there are lots of articles completed & published somewhere in the world. It can be really intimidating to sort out the good from the bad, the news from the junk, and the hot from the not. While Google News does a really good job of aggregating news from all over the world, from multitudes of sources, the presentation of that news leaves a lot to be desired.

After all, information is only useful if it is consumed and assimilated quickly. Newsmap, a free online news reader, hopes to make that process easy for the masses. First of all, head over to the [NO LONGER WORKS] Adobe Flash website and get a hold of the latest Flash Player. Next, head over to the Newsmap website. After verification of your email address, you can start using Newsmap. After you have logged in, click on “Customize” at the top of the Newsmap interface to customize your reading experience. The first thing you’d want to do is set up your news sources. So there you have it! Filter your RSS feeds, blend them into one, or convert them to email messages. This posting will cover three online services that provide solutions for common RSS issues, namely: filtering you RSS feeds by user-defined keyword(s), consolidating multiple feeds into one, and converting RSS feeds into email updates. FilterMyRSS.com: is a web service that can filter your RSS feeds based on keywords that you specify.

Needless to say this can be extremely useful in reducing information overload by delivering only those news items that contain your keywords and thus have a high probability of being interesting and/or relevant to you. Here’s an example: let’s say that you get the RSS feed from a popular software portal but that you are only interested in seeing news items about freeware or open source items. SendMeRSS also offers widgets for site/blog owners that allow visitors to request email updates straight from the site.

Feed Notifier: get real-time RSS feed notifications in your system tray. Have you ever wished you could have pop-up notifications of the latest stories on the websites you read, the latest Tweets of people you follow, or even the latest eBay and Craigslist postings for items that you are interested in? This is exactly what Feed Notifier can do for you. Feed Notifier is a free, system-tray based RSS feed notifier with some advanced functionality, such as the ability to filter items based on keywords, support for RSS and Atom feeds, and support for authenticated feeds that require a user name and password. It is also generally very versatile and highly configurable.

I have come across a number of free system-tray based RSS feed notifiers, but Feed Notifier brings a sophistication and elegance that eludes most other programs. More notes as follows: Keyword filtering: this is really powerful. Wish list (or how this program can be even better) Support for images: strangely, Feed Notifier does not display any images that are included in the feed. Version Tested: 2.2. Combine multiple feeds into one with FeedMingle. FeedDemon 3.0 Beta Syncs to Google Reader - Feed reader.

Who Is Syndicating Your Content? CopyGator Knows - ReadWriteWeb. It's no secret, we here at ReadWriteWeb are fans of RSS. Still, we have to admit that the format has its benefits and its drawbacks. In a world of RSS feeds, the syndication of content is a foregone conclusion - for readers. But as we all know, any number of sites have cropped up that take RSS content, publish it to another page, and wrap that page in ads. They've been around for years and they don't show any sign of going away. But wouldn't you - at the very least - like to know who is repurposing your content? Simply take the URL of your site and feed it to CopyGator.

How does it work? "The copygator service aggregates data from over two million blog feeds, and parses over a half million new blog posts a day. Once you've set CopyGator up, you can continue to monitor your content via email, RSS, or by returning to the site and running another query. The service is simple, fast, and accurate. At the very least, it's interesting to see where the content turns up. Feedscrub is like a spam filter for your RSS feeds.

Just because you subscribe to an RSS feed doesn't mean you want to read every single thing in that feed. What if you read Download Squad just for Brad Linder's posts, or you're only interested in posts about Google? FeedScrub might be what you're looking for. It lets you vote each of your RSS articles up or down, training it to only display the stuff you care about. You then subscribe to the scrubbed feed in your reader, and you're good to go. Where FeedScrub gets things right is at the bottom of each item in the scrubbed feed, where they've put in buttons so you can train FeedScrub directly from your reader. Where it gets things wrong -- but only a little bit -- is by giving you one set of preferences for all of your subscriptions, instead of letting you export them as separate scrubbed feeds. SuggestRSS knows which blogs you should be reading. SuggestRSS: Super Simple New Feed Recommendations - ReadWriteWeb. Let's say you like RSS feeds.

Let's say you're looking for some more good ones to subscribe to so you don't miss good stuff. There are a number of ways to accomplish this, but this week New York based developer Jonathan Christopher built a nice simple new one. Give his app SuggestRSS just a few minutes of your time and it will give you some cool new feeds to subscribe to. Years after the untimely demise of Share Your OPML and available now, unlike the super feature rich but frozen in private beta service Toluu, Jonathan Christopher's SuggestRSS is easily worth the minimal effort it will take you to try out. To use SuggestRSS, export your reading list from your feed reader and you'll get an OPML file on your desktop. You'll get some duplicates with the system, the sample size is small, it's dominated by tech feeds and not good for much yet with other niches. That's it.

Web Apps: RSSFeed.me Puts Your RSS Feeds on a High Contrast Display. BlogBridge. Create RSS easily. RSS Software. Free Download. RSS Compendium. RSS Resource Center. Newzie RSS reader will monitor pages without RSS feeds - Download Squad. It's been a few years since we last checked in on RSS reader Newzie. And it turns out the developers weren't sitting on their behinds for the past three years. Because the latest version of this free RSS reader for Windows is even cooler. First up, Newzie has all the same basic features we loved, including color coded indicators that let you know at a glance how new an item is. But it also has one awesome new feature: the ability to monitor pages without RSS feeds. Just click the add button, select webpage, and then decide what kind of changes you want to monitor.

You can also create several different types of custom channels. [via gHacks] Feed Downloader - Home. Tiny Tiny RSS: A PHP and Ajax feed reader. Bitworking. Aggie is a news aggregator: it is a desktop application that downloads the latest news and displays it in a webpage. For more information on RSS and news aggregators see this very informative page from the State of Utah GILS Project. The latest version of Aggie is 1.0 Release Candidate 5. Full source, executable, and README are available as a download. If you are curious here is a screenshot of Aggie at work.

Special thanks to: Simon Fell, Eric Vitiello Jr., Ziv Caspi, Ingve Voremstrand, Tim Danner, and everybody that has submitted bug reports and enhancement requests. The SMTP mailer is based on code by Steaven Woyan. For HTTP decompression we use SharpZipLib. Why you will love Aggie Open Source It is OSI Certified Open Source Software. It is a native .Net application. Flexible It can handle RSS file versions 0.91, 0.92, 0.93, 0.94, 1.0, and 2.0.

Fast. Aggie is multi-threaded, making more efficient use of your internet connection and getting the news to you faster. Small Native GUI Stylesheets. KlipFolio might be the only desktop widget you ever need - Download Squad. KlipFolio is a desktop application that lets you access online content like RSS feeds, weather forecasts, Flickr slideshows, YouTube videos, and other web content. We first checked out KlipFolio more than two years ago when it was little more than a widgetized RSS reader. But the application has come a long way since then. You can now use KlipFolio to subscribe to all sorts of content. Pretty much anything with an RSS feed is fair game, but you can also browse the KlipFolio web site for specialized "klip sets," including email notifiers, social network updates, or content from webcams.

There are also klip sets that let you monitor shoutcast streams or see the latest updates to the iTunes music store. KlipFolio 5 beta D also has a slick new interface. The Windows application is also pretty lightweight compared with other desktop widget engines, eating just under 10MB of RAM during my test. [via MakeUseOf] Blogging. How to set RSS feeds as your desktop - Download Squad. FeedRinse - clean up your subscribed feeds - Download Squad.

There has been a lot of talk about Yahoo! 's new Pipes service, and for good reason. Pipes allows you to mix and match RSS feeds and make something that suits a very specific purpose. But as much as Pipes was made for the non-developers out there, the barrier to entry is still a tad high for some of us. What about the rest of us that need to massage an RSS feed a little bit, but for whom Pipes is not a good answer? If you're trying to scrub a feed and filter it down in some manner, have a look at FeedRinse. For example, for you TechCrunch might be Mike Arrington only. Or maybe you love Download Squad, but can't stand my posts. RSS Feed Aggregator and Blogging Smart Client - The Code Project - Smart Client. Contents Introduction RSS Feeder.NET is a free open source desktop RSS feed aggregator which downloads feeds from web sources and stores them locally for offline viewing, searching and processing.

It is also a rich blogging tool which you can use to blog a variety of blog engines including WordPress, B2Evolution, .Text, Community Server etc. You can be fully MS Outlook® dependent or can run fully standalone. You can also use both at the same time whichever you find comfortable to work with. It does not increase the Outlook load time, nor does it make the Outlook slow or prevent it from closing properly.

It is a Smart Client that makes best use of both Local Resource and Distributed Web Information sources. Update History August 9, 2005 - Source code updated, Web Log Manager has several fixes. Features Newspaper mode. Feature walkthrough Let’s have a small walkthrough of all the features of RSS Feeder .NET: Outlook style view Daily Blogpaper – Newspaper style reading Rich blogging feature. Mash up RSS feeds with xFruits - Lifehacker.