
Still, I would think twice before using this approach in an application that had more serious time, accuracy, and financial transaction implications than this blog and would advise my clients accordingly. The ability to weave RSS feeds together can be a powerful tool I've also used it to display selected records from a DabbleDB database I maintain for tracking survey interviews. Overall, I'm very pleased with the ability to pull these systems together in one place with minimal work.
#Rss reader widgets update#
This problem might not exist were it possible for me on my own to update the Grazr application on its servers but this gets us back to what you can expect to receive for "free." Fortunately, clicking on the link in the Grazr widget links to nothing. Unfortunately, the spam comment still appears for a while afterwards in the Grazr-displayed comment feed.


I'm hoping this issue will be resolved soon as I can't tell where the problem is originating given that my RSS feed seems to be viewable vis a standard browser. In fact, I'm currently communicating with Social Media Today staff about the fact that my most recent blog posts haven't been picked up by that service. The speed and frequency with which my feed is picked up and displayed varies. Examples are Facebook and Social Media Today.

#Rss reader widgets manual#
#Rss reader widgets free#
Also, the Grazr and services I use are free so I can't complain of any out of pocket costs. I'm impressed that al these systems work with each other as well as they do. It's the RSS feed generated by for this "comments" tag that the Grazr widget then displays on my own blog.

In the case of blog comments I make elsewhere, I manually tag the blog post I comment on when I make them and include the tag "comments" in my bookmark for the commented-on blog post. In the former case I use the RSS feed that my Squarespace blogging system automatically generates for all the blog comments I receive. I also use Grazr, RSS, and bookmarks to track and publish the comments I receive on my own blog posts ( comments made here) and the comments I leave on other blogs ( comments made there).
