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RSS Feeds
Asia Food Journal RSS Feeds
RSS (really simple syndication) allows Web sites to make their most recent content available to you automatically. A program called an RSS reader, or "aggregator," helps you to organize and view the various RSS feeds that you choose to subscribe to. The power of RSS lies in its ability to bring all of the news and content that interests you into one place. Rather than visiting 10 Web sites, you fire up your reader and quickly see what all of them have published. Then you click through to the articles that you want to read.
Get a reader
To take advantage of RSS feeds, you need an RSS reader/aggregator. Generally, these tools come in two forms: a program that you install on your computer, or a Web-based service. You can find a good list of available readers here. One of the easiest ways to get started with RSS is through Yahoo!'s "My Yahoo!" offering, where you can make RSS feeds part of your own customized home page. Another popular RSS tool, Newsgator, comes in two flavors: a free, browser-based version and an installable product that costs money but integrates directly into Microsoft Outlook.
What RSS is not
Asia Food Journal's RSS headline service is not intended as a substitute for licensing the complete content of our articles. Please contact Sheila Wan at sheila.wan@rbi-asia.com if you'd like to use our article content.
Get Asia Food Journal's headlines daily as soon as they publish.
Receive Asia Food Journal's latest news and issue articles as soon as we publish them. Depending on your RSS reader, you can drag the orange "Subscribe" button into your news aggregator program and it will subscribe you to our feeds. Alternatively, right-click and choose "Copy shortcut," then paste the address into your RSS program.
Asia Food Journal's News Feed
Asia Food Journal's Channel Feeds
What's this RSS? How do I use it?
Receive Asia Food Journal's latest news and issue articles as soon as we publish them. Depending on your RSS reader, you can drag the orange "Subscribe" button into your news aggregator program and it will subscribe you to our feeds. Alternatively, right-click and choose "Copy shortcut," then paste the address into your RSS program.
RSS (really simple syndication) allows Web sites to make their most recent content available to you automatically. A program called an RSS reader, or "aggregator," helps you to organize and view the various RSS feeds that you choose to subscribe to. The power of RSS lies in its ability to bring all of the news and content that interests you into one place. Rather than visiting 10 Web sites, you fire up your reader and quickly see what all of them have published. Then you click through to the articles that you want to read.
Get a reader
To take advantage of RSS feeds, you need an RSS reader/aggregator. Generally, these tools come in two forms: a program that you install on your computer, or a Web-based service. You can find a good list of available readers here. One of the easiest ways to get started with RSS is through Yahoo!'s "My Yahoo!" offering, where you can make RSS feeds part of your own customized home page. Another popular RSS tool, Newsgator, comes in two flavors: a free, browser-based version and an installable product that costs money but integrates directly into Microsoft Outlook.
What RSS is not
Asia Food Journal's RSS headline service is not intended as a substitute for licensing the complete content of our articles. Please contact Sheila Wan at sheila.wan@rbi-asia.com if you'd like to use our article content.











