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Web feeds
Web feeds






web feeds

Individual RSS feeds serve as an electronic tip - essentially in real time. Visitors can also choose to subscribe to these feeds via email: Tennessee uses a feed management provider called Feedburner, purchased by Google in 2007, to deliver its RSS feeds, allowing the ability to track the number of subscriptions for each feed. The Tennessee Supreme Court offers RSS feeds for all appellate court opinions, news releases and the supreme court’s weekly discretionary appeals list. The page listing Ohio's feeds also includes a tutorial on RSS feeds at the bottom of the page. However, Ohio is considering streamlining their feeds and removing some of these options to make it easier for users. The Supreme Court of Ohio, at the other extreme, has no fewer than 20 RSS feeds, one for each of the justices as well as individual feeds for case announcements, opinions, summaries of rule changes, various administrative actions, bar admissions, commission activities and news releases. The Arkansas Supreme Court has a page for its feeds, one of which syndicates the oral argument schedules for the supreme court and court of appeals, while the other is for news releases: Some courts have introduced web feeds limited to periodic announcements like oral argument schedules, news releases and opinions.

web feeds

Feeds like RSS or Atom allow users to receive frequently updated content efficiently in a timely fashion. Subscribers access the feeds through an aggregator, which allows them to read the content through browsers, desktop applications or mobile device apps. The content is formatted using XML, which allows it to be read by a wide variety of platforms. RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication, an apt descriptor for a service that permits users to easily subscribe to a stream of content from a website, podcast host or other provider. More courts, however, have embraced Web news feed formats such as RSS and listservs that send content out to subscribers, rather than making them visit the court’s website for new content. Social media are dramatically changing the online experience for people all over the world, and some courts are already experimenting with web presences on social networking sites like Facebook.








Web feeds