About RSS
RSS is a standard Web technology that lets Web sites, including InformationWeek, automatically send you updates whenever we post a new article. InformationWeek offers the following feeds:
Editors' Picks:
- All InformationWeek Stories
- All InformationWeek News
- All InformationWeek Commentary
- All InformationWeek Product Reviews
- All InformationWeek White Papers
InformationWeek Topic Centers:
- Cloud
- Cloud Commentary
- Hardware
- Hardware Commentary
- Mobility
- Mobility Commentary
- Personal Tech
- Personal Tech Commentary
- Security
- Security Commentary
- Social Business
- Social Business Commentary
- Software
- Software Commentary
- Windows
- Windows Commentary
InformationWeek Business Technology Network:
- Global CIO
- InformationWeek Government
- InformationWeek Healthcare
- InformationWeek SMB
- InformationWeek SMB Commentary
- Financial
- The BrainYard
- BYTE
InformationWeek Authors:
- Charles Babcock
- Paul Cerrato
- Thomas Claburn
- George Crump
- Jonathan Feldman
- John Foley
- Doug Henschen
- J. Nicholas Hoover
- Eric Lundquist
- Kurt Marko
- Paul McDougall
- Marianne Kolbasuk McGee
- Laurianne McLaughlin
- Chris Murphy
- Fritz Nelson
- Rob Preston
- Larry Seltzer
- Mathew J. Schwartz
- Art Wittmann
- Eric Zeman
Is your favorite author not listed above? To subscribe to any InformationWeek author feed, click on the byline from any story to go to a bio page, and look for the RSS icon in the right column.
How To Use RSS
You can consume RSS in many ways. The most popular is to add the RSS feed to a customized home page, such as My Yahoo or iGoogle. Follow the instructions for your service to add InformationWeek feeds to your home page.
Web browsers including Microsoft Internet Explorer 7, Firefox, and Safari have built-in RSS readers, as does Apple Mail in Apple OS X 10.5 (a/k/a Leopard).
Web-based RSS readers are another popular option. Google Reader, NewsGator, and Bloglines are three good choices. All three have services that work on your BlackBerry, iPhone, or other mobile device.
Or you can get an RSS reader for your desktop. Two of the most popular options there are FeedDemon for Windows and NetNewsWire for the Mac. Google Desktop has an RSS reader built into it.
What Does RSS Stand For
Really Simple Syndication or Rich Site Summary.
Questions And Comments
Got any questions, comments, or suggestions about InformationWeek's RSS feeds? Write to us.
This Week's Issue
Free Print Subscription
SubscribeSupplemental Issue
Related Whitepapers
- Gartner Research Picking the Right Server Type to Solve Your Data Center Space, Power and Heat Problems
- ComputerWorld Tech Dossier: HP ProLiant DL360p & DL380p Gen8 Severs: Power, Flexibility & Serviceability
- ESG whitepaper: Defining Tier One Storage in the Modern Data Center
- Virtualizing Tier 1 Applications: A Critical Step on the Journey Toward the Private Cloud
- Open Source Drives Innovation in Financial Services











