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Oregon Direct Action - We feed, you update

RSS feedUpdates for our Community - RSS or Email - Posts written by the team intended to help facilitate interaction with those in the community interested in our projects - Low traffic, includes general updates and those for community

RSS feedUpdates for our Partners - RSS or Email - Posts and del.icio.us links geared towards keeping the partners of Oregon Direct Action updated on its activities - Medium traffic, includes general updates, and posts for everyone and community

RSS feedUpdates for our Advisers - RSS or Email - Posts and del.icio.us links geared towards keeping the advisers of Oregon Direct Action updated on its activities - Medium traffic, includes general updates, and posts for everyone and community

RSS feedUpdates for the Team - RSS or Email - Posts and del.icio.us links primarily to keep the team informed of project research and developments as they happen - Highest traffic

Note: These feeds work in tiers.  By subscribing to the “Team” RSS feed, you will receive everything posted on our site.  By subscribing to “Partners”, you will receive everything posted except for that posted in the “Team” category.  And so on and so forth.

Other feeds to munch on

RSS feedConferenceCast - iTunes or RSS - A podcast of the team’s weekly conference calls.  Subscribe in iTunes to listen in after the conversations are recorded

RSS feedCommentsRSS or Email - Responses to all posts on the Oregon Direct Action website, which allows the audience to track conversations on blog posts

What is RSS?

Well, according to Wikipedia:

RSS is a family of Web feed formats used to publish frequently updated content such as blog entries, news headlines, and podcasts in a standardized format. An RSS document (which is called a “feed”, “web feed”, or “channel”) contains either a summary of content from an associated web site or the full text. RSS makes it possible for people to keep up with web sites in an automated manner that can be piped into special programs or filtered displays.

Commoncraft also has a video on the subject titled “RSS in Plain English