Create a thread and find answers by posting a question to any of our product support forums. I think that may not be shown by default but can be added by customising. '%26lt;':'')}))}function lEsc(s){return(s.replace(/&/g,'%26amp;').replace(/"/,'%26quote;'))}t=hEsc(document.title);h='';with(window.open().document){write('
'+h+'Click the highlighted RSS feed icon');close();}})(); Dig into the knowledge base, tips and tricks, troubleshooting, and so much more. I think that's actually a bug. The experience is more akin to a traditional RSS app that simply operates within a web browser than something redesigned like RSS Feed Reader for Chrome. It checks every box and isn’t a total pain to set up like Brief.You could always try to bypass all this RSS extension stuff by using something like Feedly. *http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookmarklet It is the same URL only send by the server as application/xhtml+xml instead of text/html Neither did I. It’s one of the neat little features hidden inside Apple’s browser. Doesn’t help that the in-extension tutorial doesn’t work.Another site is this blog https://blog.mozilla.org/ that has no link or button for the feeds but the feed can be found and used with the subscribe icon.I have a keyword (rss) bookmarklet for cases like this: To use RSS, you will need an RSS reader, such as My MSN, My Yahoo, Firefox Browser, and other downloadable RSS Readers. Otherwise you need to use the Bookmarks Menu to subscribe to a feed.
I remember live bookmarks can add them by presenting an icon, but what if all I can get is the feed url? Q&A for Work. Use Toolbar Layout (Customize) to open the Customize window and set which toolbar items to display.
# this should open a new tab/window with the subscribe toolbar button enabled (highlighted) It looks weird: I sometimes get the subscribe page send as "application/xhtml+xml" if I use Alt + Enter to open the feed page another time in a new tab or just refresh the page. View > Toolbars > Customize (press F10 to display the menu bar) Right-click empty toolbar area With the demise of Google Reader, though, it’s worth looking at other alternatives. *Although a Thunderbird article this gives some background information you may find useful [[How to Subscribe to News Feeds and Blogs]] I think that may not be shown by default but can be added by customising. You could always a web service like Apple hides this feature in Safari with no explanation or pointer explaining that it’s there, so you’d be excused for not knowing about it.Open up a Safari window and click on the sidebar button at the top.Click on the “@” icon at the top of the page. # create a new bookmark (AddFeed on the Bookmarks Toolbar) with the location set as the full JavaScript code *[[Customize Firefox controls, buttons and toolbars]] Mit einem Rechtsklick auf den RSS-Bookmark können Sie unter "Eigenschaften" und in dem anschließend erscheinenden Menü unter "Zeitplan" festlegen, wie oft der RSS-Feed aktualisiert werden soll. *rss https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/993134/feed I liked The experience is more akin to a traditional RSS app that simply operates within a web browser than something redesigned like RSS Feed Reader for Chrome.Adding feeds is confusing as hell, though. Our objective is to present the best of it to our audience. Über Rechtsklick und "RSS Title" wird dem RSS-Kanal automatisch der richtige Name verpasst. This is your “Shared Links” page, which is a fancy term for a way to keep up with your RSS feeds.To add new feeds, you have to visit the website you’d like to follow. - Full standalone feed reader (RSS, Atom, RDF) as a Firefox/Chrome/Vivaldi extension - no online services needed - Built-in Social Media plugin support (Youtube, Youtube Search, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, VK, LinkedIn Groups, LinkedIn home feed, LinkedIn Jobs, LinkedIn hashtag feed, Yammer, Bitchute, Vimeo, SlideShare, Pinterest, Reddit) - Extremely fast! What I’ve been doing up until Firefox 63 was to simply paste the URL of my to-be-tested RSS feed into Firefox and hit return. “After considering maintenance, performance and security costs of feed preview and […] # open the page with the feed content in a tab This extension mimics the excellent native handling of RSS and Atom feed reading in Firefox using live bookmarks. According to Mozilla the feature has low usage, and removing it will mean fewer resources spent on securing and maintaining the feature.