This blend contains 0 feed:
FeedBlendr takes a bunch of RSS, RDF or Atom feeds (news, blogs, podcasts, you name it) and puts the contents of all of them into a single "blend", which is ordered by date, newest at the top. You can then view the blend online, on a mobile device, integrate it into your own site, or just subscribe to it in any news reader. Oh yeah, and it's free! Cool huh?
Subscribe to this feed using one of these links.
http://feedblendr.com/blends/3711.atom (Atom 1.0 Format Feed)
http://feedblendr.com/blends/3711.rss (RSS 2.0 Format Feed, Perfect for iTunes!)
Or add this feed to your favorite online reader by clicking below and then selecting from the list
If this blend is not accessed by anyone for more than 3 months, it may be automatically removed.
View the contents of this blend anywhere.
http://feedblendr.com/blends/3711.html (Gotta have it? Read this blend online now)
http://feedblendr.com/blends/3711.m (Never miss a thing. Complete mobile access to this blend)
The online view provided above (.html) will always let you check out the latest posts in a blend, and you can browse through pages to see everything in the blend. This is a great way to quickly check your most common feeds when you're away from your normal reader.
The mobile view (.m) is a lightweight way to check a blend while you're on the road. Output is optimized for mobile devices and should work in anything that supports HTML and has internet access.
OPML for your outlining pleasure.
http://feedblendr.com/blends/3711.opml (Re-blend, add to a news-reader, go nuts)
Outline Processor Markup Language (OPML) is the industry standard for creating outlines or lists of any type, including reading lists of RSS feeds. Use the link above to get a copy of the list of source feeds which make up this blend.
You can use this OPML file to create a new blend, import into a news reader, share with friends or just save it as a backup of the feeds in this blend.
Geeks roll your own.
If you're looking for some more flexible options for consuming this blend, then this is the place for you.
Many publishers provide feeds of their content to enable syndication, although normally permission is only granted for non-commercial uses. FeedBlendr allows you to combine multiple feeds and even display the results on your own site. The output is completely customizable using CSS - find out more about customizing output.
Paste the code below into your page where you want this blend to appear
There's a really cool API if you're into that kind of thing, and you can get a JSON object of the contents of this blend if you want to integrate its contents into your web-app.
Read about all your options for working with feeds in the Developers section.