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Depending on who you ask, RSS can stand for Rich Site Summary, RDF Site Summary, or Really Simple Syndication. No matter your preferred explanation, RSS has become a popular way to syndicate content across the Internet.
RSS allows you to see when sites from all over the internet have added new content. You can get the latest headlines and articles (or even audio files, photographs or video) in one place, as soon as they are published, without having to remember to visit each site every day.
Commonly used by the weblog community, RSS is fast becoming the format of choice for software applications called "news aggregators" or "news readers" that consolidate RSS enabled content, or RSS Feeds, from multiple websites into a single view. News aggregators allow users to better sort and filter the overwhelming amount of new data available on the internet each day such as news headlines and press announcements. Simply put, RSS and applications that make use of RSS can significantly reduce the time required to find, manage and consume the content that interests you the most.