On Habré there are two great features that allow you to track news on topics that are interesting to you personally:
- RSS feed for each
tag-
Habraletna (also with RSS, ruzumeetsya), which can be configured so that it will show you
extremely interesting blogs.
Why not combine these two chips into one, super-mega-cool, namely:
Choose certain tags that are interesting to you (tags) with which posts will be sucked into your Habralent!
Who does not quite understand what I mean, and / or why it is necessary -
read on:
To keep track of interesting content to me, I subscribe to the RSS of my habranth in Google Reader - and as soon as the new topic is published in an interesting blog for me, I am immediately notified about this.
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But here one moment arises: sometimes (yes, I won’t meltish - it often happens!) Some users post their topic on a topic on a not entirely correct blog, or even on a completely wrong one (and this happens).
In this case, the tags are saved - you subscribe to the RSS broadcast of all the tags that are interesting to you through, for example, Google Reader, and when something with these tags is published, it is immediately visible in Google Reader.
But this workaround has 2 big
drawbacks :
- first, in addition to Habralenta, you will have to subscribe to a bunch of separate RSS feeds - one for each tag you are interested in.
- secondly, one topic can contain several tags, and (if you subscribe to them) - this topic will appear in Google Reader several times (possibly in Habralent, plus, once for each tag).
Solution: make it so that topics with tags (tags) selected by you are sucked into the content of Habralenta. The necessary labels can be typed through a comma somewhere in the settings of the Habralenta in the profile. It is clear that if a topic has 2 or more tags that you “suck in”, then it will appear in the Habralent only once.
Then just subscribe to your Habralent on RSS, and forget about everything else.
This solution has one more plus: you can subscribe to tags in advance that do not yet exist on the site (for example, at the beginning all topics about Asus eeePC had the label “eeePC”; over time, posts began to appear with the tags “eee PC. ”The fact that someone would write this through a space, I immediately wondered, but I could not subscribe to the RSS of a non-existent tag).