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November 2008 Archives

November 20, 2008

RSS to iPhone / iPod touch

DoYouFeed, a site that takes an RSS feed and formats it for pretty viewing on an iPhone or iPod touch. Once you give it an RSS feed to process, it returns an iPhone- iPod touch-friendly web page with the headlines and brief descriptions from the feed. Clicking on an article link pulls up the full text of the item but without the blog's trappings -- very handy if you're using your gadget on a slow data network (as opposed to wireless).

While the reader itself works as advertised, I have two criticisms. The first is that the iPhone's version of Safari already knows how to read RSS feeds -- it does so by routing them through a service that Apple provides.

The second, and more serious one, is that DoYouFeed puts advertisements at the bottom of the full text article, thereby making money from the blogger's words without returning any of it to the author. In the case of the DoYouFeed version of RSS4Lib's feed, this is in direct violation of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 license I placed in the RSS feed. This license only allows, as it says, non-commercial use of the feed. DoYouFeed should parse the RSS feed and either not display non-commercial-use only feeds or not display advertisements on them.

Update (4:00 PM 11/20/08) -- fixed URL to DoYoueed; left off a pesky "www."

November 21, 2008

Another RSS-to-PDF Tool, This One from HP

Tabbloid is a utility provided by HP that takes one or more RSS feeds and converts them to a PDF document. The PDFs can either be emailed to you on a schedule you set -- hourly, daily, or weekly -- on the hour (for daily mails) or day (for weekly) you specify. The PDF files Tabbloid sends out appear to be incremental -- so you only receive news published in the subscribed feeds since the last mailing.

The subscription interface is pretty straightforward:

Add a feed (you can add as many as you like), enter an email address, pick your delivery options, and save them. The resulting PDF file can either be downloaded instantly or sent by email.

A few notes about the PDF. The document is nicely formatted in two columns and is easy to read. Each item is identified by title and blog source, though the post's author is not displayed. The title links to the original version of the item on the web. The favicon for the blog is displayed after the article.

A few criticisms of the PDF: First, in my tests, the order of articles is apparently random. This does not seem appropriate when the layout of the items is in a simple two-column format. Second, the time stamp displayed on each article is the same -- and is the time stamp for the most recently published article.

A few minor bugs mar Tabbloid's performance -- especially for a tool not blatantly labeled "beta" -- but it makes a handy tool for offline reading. The service has its own weblog, but all that's listed is a brief introductory statement promising more things to come. One suggestion in the blog's comments is to add an OPML import tool -- an excellent suggestion. Overall though, this RSS-to-PDF tool has a simple user interface and a clear, easy-to-read output format.


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