Yahoo Mail Beta Gains RSS Reading Feature
The new Yahoo Mail that’s in
beta has
gained a new way to add RSS feeds into your mail folder. For me, it’s nothing
shocking. I already pull RSS feeds into Outlook folders and read them in exactly
this way. But it’s nice for those who want this feature in a web-based email
system.
By default, if you click the Add button next to your All RSS Feeds folder, a
window pops-up where you’re offered to enter feeds from places like the New York
Times, the Wall Street Journal, News.com, Salon, Digital Photography Review and
— of course — the Search Engine Watch Blog.
OK, I joke about that last one. We don’t make that cut. But if you want us or
anything not listed, you can paste the feed into the Address box at the bottom
of the Add window.
What’s very, very nice is that if you already have a My Yahoo account with
feeds added, Yahoo Mail automatically lists those feeds within your All RSS
Feeds folder. Great foresight on that, Yahoo!
Have multiple feeds? Each feed gets its own subfolder within the All RSS
Feeds folder. You can click on a subfolder and read posts just for that feed.
Sadly, clicking on the main All RSS Feeds folder doesn’t show you a view of
everything, all feeds combined into one. That might just be a glitch for me,
however. SiliconBeat
says this type of “river of news” view should be working.
It’s also too bad you can’t do what NewsGator
allows, create multiple folders and put feeds inside of those, to read subsets
of feeds.
Someday I’ll explain more how this works in more depth with NewsGator. But in
short, I have a folder called Search:Hot where I have feeds from 10 or so
different blogs that are places always on top of search news. If I’m in a hurry
and want to see if anything new is going on, I hit that folder. Rather than
important news on search perhaps being drowned out by other stuff, I get a
concentrated yet combined view. When I have more time, I look at other folders
that group feeds such as Search:Medium and Search:Cool. And non-search feeds
that I take go into different folders.
The system works well for me. Obviously, it’s not for everyone. But it would
be nice to see Yahoo add this as the beta matures.
How about the ability to import all your feeds from another reader via OPML? My Yahoo has an old feature for this, which should in turn bring feeds into Yahoo Mail. But when I tried, it didn’t work. Yahoo says it’s an old import version and that a new one is promised soon.
Yahoo Mail?s full post RSS reader from Yahoo’s Scott Gatz gives you some
nice screenshots illustrating the service more, helpful for those not in the
beta who can’t play with it now.
While Scott calls the system a “full post” reader, remember that this is only
true if the feed itself puts out the full post content. If the feed only carries
summaries or partial posts, that’s all you’ll get. Scott and Yahoo Mail’s Ethan
Diamond are also interviewed on the new system over
here at PodTech.
Want the new Yahoo Mail service now? It is pretty slick. My wife was a
regular Yahoo Mail user and loved that, and she loves the new service even more.
Scott kindly points to a
form where you can ask to be included.
So where’s the Add To Yahoo Mail button for feed publishers? None that I can
see yet, and somewhat of a problem for Yahoo. They have the long-standing
Add To My Yahoo button that many
use. Will people who use the new Yahoo Mail understand that these buttons are a
way to add to Yahoo Mail as well? Or will an entirely new user-friendly button
for Yahoo Mail users have to come along. I’ll check with Scott on this and
postscript on Yahoo’s plans.
Submitting RSS Feeds To Yahoo for Search Engine Watch
members goes
into more depth about getting your feeds into My Yahoo and in front of potential
feed searchers, so check that out.
Yahoo Feed Search
& Web Search Feeds Update covers how searchers can seek and add content into
My Yahoo itself, if you want some further assistance on that.
Getting Add To & Subscribe Buttons For Feeds for Search Engine Watch members
also runs down some popular Add To buttons that marketers may want to consider
using to encourage subscriptions.
Postscript: Scott tells me…