Dana posted 
              a link about a great article on RSS publishing on his blog 
              a few days ago. Immediately after I read it I contacted the author, 
              Robin Good, 
              to ask him whether he would like to contribute to the debate. 
            Well, he said yes ... and sent me the 
              very same article I'm talking about above. 
            Actually, the article says just about everything 
              about RSS ... well, not everything, but comes pretty close to it. 
              That at least makes my job for my next article easier:)
            It's a great read ... so go ahead ...
            The Future of RSS - Is E-Mail Publishing Dead?
            RSS-based Information And News Feeds: Pros and 
              Cons For Content Distribution Through RSS 
            by Robin Good, http://www.masternewmedia.org/
            RSS 
              is good 
              because it gives back to individual users the power to choose and 
              select content. This, along with timeliness, portability and cost-effectiveness, 
              are probably the best reasons why you should understand how and 
              why RSS is going to change the way you select and receive your information, 
              news and updates.
              
              Is RSS Going to Replace E-Mail?
            As my first 
              and most immediate answer I must say that the question has been 
              wrongly posed. E-mail is a two-way communication medium while RSS 
              is only a distribution one. From that simple realization, you can 
              immediately derive that e-mail is here to stay, while RSS may well 
              poised to substantially challenge e-mail in its ability to be the 
              best and preferred distribution/subscription mechanism for newsletter 
              publishers on the Internet.
              
              The issue is still hot and being discussed in many online forums 
              and discussion lists, though, until now, reserved to an audience 
              of veteran computer users, Internet pioneers and geeks. According 
              to several industry analysts, researchers and technologists writing 
              in the noosphere, 
              email is soon to be dead and RSS will be the prince coming to mourn 
              at her death Web. Unless you go and read carefully what is being 
              written and sometimes easily skipped over, it would appear as if 
              RSS was not coming by to save or resurrect email, but to replace 
              her with a new way of messaging and communicating with each other.
              
              Much of the confusion and misunderstanding stems from the fact that 
              RSS is an acronym that few understand, and one that has multiple 
              meanings (RSS stands for "Rich Site Summary" or "Really 
              Simple Syndication" or "Really Stops Spam," depending 
              upon your preference). RSS is also something that once you have 
              read its description, you know less about it than you did before. 
              In essence, very few understand what RSS is and why it is something 
              of relevance to many of us. In such an eco-confused information 
              space, readers, information seekers and independent publishers are 
              somewhat confused about how to proceed, how much hype is in the 
              RSS news, and what is in store for them in this fast-changing communication 
              formula. 
              
              One way out of this confusion is to start adopting terms that would 
              allow popularization of the term and easier understanding of what 
              benefits it provides. The terms information and/or news-feed 
              appear in my opinion to be the ones best suited for this task.
              
              What is RSS?
              
              RSS 
              is an old technology that originated with Netscape. RSS allows readers 
              to sign-up and to receive news, headlines and short summaries from 
              websites, weblogs, and online newsletters. In order to do so, RSS 
              subscribers must download and install a so-called news reader or 
              aggregator (not to be confused with the more traditional type of 
              newsreaders used to access Usenet forums and discussions).  
            
            Newsreaders 
              and News aggregators - Where to find them
            Many newsreaders 
              and aggregators exist today on the market. The most popular ones 
              are: Newzcrawler, 
              AmphetaDesk, 
              FeedDemon, 
              NetNewsWire, 
              NewsGator, 
              Newsmonster, 
              and Radio Userland.  
              For more resources, please see: Lockergnome 
              RSS Resources, RSS 
              Resources,  
              RSS Readers, or
              RSS Info.
            To simplify 
              your task of evaluating and better understanding RSS, I have summarized 
              the key positive aspects of RSS-based information feeds for email 
              publishing and distribution.
            The Positive 
              Aspects of RSS-based newsfeeds
               
              Using RSS as a source of timely and up-to-date information is a 
              positive evolution and a definite step forward from where we are 
              now. The advantages of RSS over traditional emails are:
              
              1) RSS is timely. Subscribers get updates and breaking news 
              as soon as they are published and not on the date the newsletter 
              is due. RSS allows us to plug into selected sources of information, 
              like independent reporters, researchers and industry analysts and 
              when they disseminate or report some new information, it allows 
              us to be the first to get it, without having to subscribe to any 
              newsletter, or having to disclose our email address to a new, unknown 
              company. 
              
              2) RSS is cost-effective. Cost of delivery and distribution 
              is reduced dramatically. No more paying a mailing list distribution 
              provider, nor having to format and layout news and articles for 
              a different media than the website.
              
              3) RSS is standards-compliant. (If wanted) Maximum compatibility 
              is preserved allowing email subscribers with text, HTML, AOL or 
              MIME Multipart preferences to all receive well formed news updates 
              perfectly compatible with your email client.
              
              4) RSS is email independent. Email client not required. RSS 
              news and feeds can be easily read online, aggregated into a web 
              page journal/portal, sent out to SMS 
              clients or managed to create new online content. 
              
              5) RSS can be fully integrated fully in your email. Yes, 
              no one forbids the final user from using new services and tools 
              which do allow perfect integration and receipt of RSS feeds inside 
              your email Inbox (e.g., NewsGator, 
              BlogStreet 
              Info Aggregator).
              
              6) RSS facilitates organization of content. Relevant messages 
              can be easily archived, sorted and organized according to topic, 
              in a fully automated way, something impossible with previously non-standard 
              newsletters.
              
              7) The subscriber is again in full control. Subscription 
              and removal from a news feed is totally under the control of the 
              user, unlike now where users may receive many newsletters that make 
              it very hard or unintuitive to unsubscribe.
              
              8) RSS is private. Privacy and security protection. RSS subscriber 
              never have to provide an email address to their selected information 
              provider. Publishers cannot as a consequence easily resell those 
              emails to unscrupulous marketers and email spammers. RSS is hardly 
              spammable as you always know the source of each news item received, 
              and there is no easy way yet to easily hack into the system.
              
              9) RSS is fully resuable. RSS is a structured, re-usable 
              content protocol that allows the content to be reused for many other 
              purposes: feeding of other news channels and Web pages, integration 
              into dynamic libraries and learning objects.
              
              10) RSS is searchable. RSS can be fully indexed and searched 
              just as Google does with the HTML content on the Internet. See Feedster 
              for a great live example.
              
              11) RSS is secure. RSS cannot yet carry viruses or trojans 
              like a newsletter or email attachment can. If it did, you could 
              easily isolate and identify the source of your infection.
              
              12) RSS is modifiable. Even after it has been sent out. Nobody 
              forbids your ability to change a current posting, or revise an errata, 
              and thus RSS subscribers indeed seamlessly receive that posted update. 
              As a matter of fact, RSS posts can be also removed or expired, and 
              while some would argue that this is not completely feasible, there 
              is certainly a wide open opportunity to explore further in this 
              direction.
              
              13) RSS will be seamless to use. While not yet so, we are 
              getting closer and closer to having news readers and aggregators 
              fully integrated in email or so easy to use that it will not be 
              a problem anymore suggesting their adoption to novice and non-technical 
              users.
              
              14) RSS feeds are not blocked by spam and email filters. 
              As newsletter publishers know very well, the battle to overcome 
              the spam barriers raised by spam and email filters is getting harder 
              everyday while RSS-based news feeds have no such problem.
              
              15) RSS can be monetized. RSS can support free as well as 
              paid content distribution. Some publishers have already started 
              text ads into their RSS-delivered news feeds. The good news is that 
              if you don't like it, you can unsubscribe in a matter of seconds, 
              without having to ask anyone's permission.
              
              16) RSS adds value. When RSS provides an easy to use complement 
              to your site, it clearly becomes a free value-added service. As 
              a matter of fact, this is already happening.  
              Lockergnome's RSS Resource and  
              Amazon.com Syndicated Content feeds are two great examples of 
              this. 
              
              17) RSS paves the road for true ethical marketing. As RSS 
              feeds provide a simple and effective way to for your customers and potential 
              clients. As RSS allows them to receive the specific kind of information 
              they seek, it is perceived as a tremendous bonus and as an opportunity 
              to simplify and reduce readers effort to reach, filter out and access 
              the type of information they are looking for. As a consequence, 
              there is no need for the publisher to utilize advertising to become 
              sustainable, as the publisher HAS all of the user attention and 
              need only to provide what the user is looking for.
            RSS Cons: 
              RSS-based problems and possible limitations
              
              1) RSS tools may be trojans for malicious software. Pre-assembled 
              aggregators and newsreaders that contain spyware and other malicious 
              code.
              
              2) E-marketing through RSS. RSS marketing may soon be the 
              new trendy buzzword in e-marketing circles. If you come to think 
              of it, there is no embedded mechanism inside RSS that prevents me 
              from posting plain marketing and promotional news items and having 
              them sent out via RSS to anyone subscribing to my feed. While this 
              is not a problem per se, it may be possible that much of our present 
              day pure news feeds will soon be enriched with advertising and other 
              non-related items. The good news is that if and when that happens, 
              unsubscribing from any newsfeed will just be one click away from 
              you.
              
              3) Limited formatting options. You can have images, yes, 
              but you certainly can't choose where they are going to be positioned 
              on the page. Forget also about having Verdana 
              12 point 
              in bold in one section, versus  
              Times New Roman 
              in another one.
              
              4) RSS cannot be easily measured, tracked and accounted for. 
              For now, there are no simple or automated ways to account for how 
              many RSS subscribers you have to your own feeds, unless you set 
              up private access and you control it through a registration or subscription 
              mechanism.
              
              5) RSS is hard to grasp. It has been difficult to popularize 
              as a "concept," as many people can hardly make any meaning 
              out of an acronym by itself. Once we find a good way to popularize 
              its role and function and identify a label to better refer to it, 
              we may also see a tremendous jump in rate of  adoption. ("Newsfeed" 
              is already a good step in this direction.) 
              
              6) RSS requires us to adopt yet one more tool. Currently, 
              accessing RSS-based news feeds requires a separate software tool. 
              This may prevent novice and non-technical users from easily adopting 
              RSS as a format that they can fully leverage to stay updated on 
              their favorite sites.
              
              7) RSS restrains editorial abilities. Publishers are limited 
              in the ways they can organize and prioritize the coverage of their 
              news content through this new medium. Their ability to showcase, 
              summarize, introduce or open up a newsletter is mostly unusable 
              when distributing news and info via RSS.
              
              8) RSS leaves online publishers with no mailing list. Publishers 
              do not have a mailing list of those seeking information from them 
              and it becomes harder for them to introduce advertising and promotional 
              messages not strongly related with their focus as these will strongly 
              affect reader interest and willingness to keep reading/subscribing. 
              As subscribers to RSS-based information feeds do not need to share 
              their private emails with content publishers, they indirectly force 
              information publishers to maintain higher quality standards of publication 
              and to have a strong focus on their selected topics of interest. 
              On the other hand, publishers can still grow marketing lists by 
              offering selected "premium" channels only to subscribing 
              customers.
              
              9) RSS offers no "reply" button. As of now, RSS 
              offers no way of replying or communicating directly to your information 
              source. It is likely that this limitation will soon be overcome 
              by complementary features, plugins and services filling in this 
              critical gap.
              
              10) RSS is a bandwidth hog. Some criticize the fact that 
              RSS readers and news aggregators have to visit a news address frequently 
              to check for updates and new posts. The critics argue that this 
              utilizes an enormous amount of bandwidth uselessly as supposedly 
              newsreaders and aggregators would attempt to pool info from those 
              sites several times a day. (If you look at the issue from a different 
              point of view, you can see how a much larger bandwidth is actually 
              used when Internet users seek information by surfing to unknown 
              sites and online resources which, rich in images and other bandwidth 
              hogs such as Javascript, tables and visual ads, require much more 
              bandwidth to display than any RSS information feed I have seen so 
              far.)
              
              11) RSS comes in many flavours. Recently RSS has seen a number 
              of different versions of its specification appear, and therefore 
              it should come as no surprise to see listings indicating support 
              for RSS 0.9, 1.x, 2.x. There is indeed a set of different possible 
              implementations of RSS with differing qualities and capabilities. 
              Suffice it to say for now that most news readers and aggregators 
              read all of these different formats, making the issue not critical 
              for end users. It is rather on the part of both content publishers 
              and subscribers to activate and engage themselves in understanding 
              which of possible standards may best benefit their specific needs 
              and requirements. 
              
              Conclusion
              
              In the wake of the quickly spreading rumour, Email 
              is Dead, long live RSS, the superficial, non-technical reader 
              lost early reference to the fact that what is being really touted 
              is the death of e-mail publishing such as newsletter distribution 
              and mail discussion lists. It is these type of email communications 
              that according to these authors would be soon succumbing to an RSS 
              flavoured distribution medium, and not the whole email-based exchange 
              universe. 
              
              So we are in effect not talking at all about the possible death 
              of email as we now know it (though a good review of it - how we 
              use it and misuse it - is way overdue) but about the raise of RSS-based 
              news feeds as an effective and efficient distribution medium for 
              news, newsletter type content and other selected and highly focused 
              types of information. Jon Udell writes to support the need for a 
              more reliable email system: "Of the various proposals floating 
              around, the -- a DNS-based solution that enables a receiving mail 
              server to verify whether the sender's IP address is authorized to 
              send from the domain within the sender's address -- seems particularly 
              interesting." 
              
              Electronic inter-personal and business exchanges will still largely 
              utilize traditional email, although for the vast majority, this 
              is becoming harder and harder to manage in an effective way.
              
              Email 
              is Dead -- Long Live RSS:  With mailboxes overflowing with 
              junk mail, users have stopped reading email or have imposed spam 
              blockers, which often block legitimate mail as well as junk. According 
              to a survey by  
              ReturnPath, an email list hygiene company, "17% of permission-based 
              e-mail -- mail that users previously said they would like to receive 
              -- was incorrectly blocked by the top 12 Internet service providers 
              during the first half of 2003." 
              
              I have been able to verify that unless specific precautions are 
              taken in the distribution of an email newsletter, over 50% of them 
              may bounce off spam filters, be deleted or never reach the final 
              user. And that is a lot of valuable resources put to waste. When 
              I see that over 3,000 of my newsletter copies are not reaching my 
              own long standing subscribers, I can certainly empathize with RSS 
              promoters and can fully see the advantages and benefits I and some 
              of my readers would get out of leveraging RSS to its fullest. 
              
              Three points to avoid RSS confusion syndrome
              
              a) Newsreaders and aggregators
              A news aggregator is a dedicated software program capable of contacting 
              and gathering pre-selected news items posted at specific addresses 
              on the Internet. What the news aggregator does is simply to go out 
              to the URL/addresses you have specified, collect the information 
              stored inside an auto-generating file that sits invisibly next to 
              certain Web pages (and which contains all of the most recent updates 
              to that page) and bring that information back inside the newsreader/aggregator 
              while storing that information in a specific folder you have specified. 
              So, as long as you know how to write the syntax and grammar of that 
              invisible RSS/RDF/XML file(s) that sits idle on your server, you 
              are in full control of what subscribers to your RSS feed will see/read. 
              Since few people enjoy creating an RSS feed by hand, new publishing 
              tools have been developed to facilitate this task. 
              
              b) Will RSS replace email even for personal communications?
              Most people interested in finding out more about RSS and its future 
              have been wondering how RSS could ever supplant altogether email 
              and how we would then go about sending a message to a friend, work 
              colleague, customer or business prospect in such RSS-enabled future.
              
              Though I may raise a ton of suspicious eyebrows with this affirmation 
              I am prone to believe that solid and certified individual authentication 
              maybe the only solid answer to this digital communication problem 
              deriving from the fact that people can act with absolute anonymity. 
              Take away the anonymity from the education and the problem is easily 
              solved. While this does not mean that I must surrender my complete 
              ability to stay anonymous online, it establishes the option for 
              those needing to carry out serious business online to do so by allowing 
              themselves to be authenticated and certified for who they really 
              are. Then we need not worry anymore about SPAM. 
              
              The level of authentication required in this vision would allow 
              anyone who wished to obtain a personal identity token by utilizing 
              a combination of digital authentication technologies (fingerprinting, 
              voice, iris-scan, etc.) complemented by the intervention of a trusted 
              and certified human notary who would have to take under his responsibility 
              and good name that the person being authenticated is actually the 
              one he or she declares to be. Once a solid authentication mechanism 
              is in place the road to block everything not coming from trusted 
              or "known" sources becomes extremely easy to implement. 
              
              
              Now imagine having an RSS feed address that is not available publicly. 
              You could have such an RSS feed reserved, for example, for all of 
              the information you need to pass onto your team. If you assume that 
              email was not there, it would be apparent to you that you could 
              indeed post all of the information relating to team work and assignments 
              on a non-public page on your site, generate an RSS channel and send 
              the URL/address channel to all of the people in your team. You can 
              easily see that once they have set-up their news aggregator to read 
              that special address you have provided, they all have a way to receive 
              all of the information you want them to receive without having to 
              use traditional email. 
              
              c) Potential for independent publishers to offer Premium content 
              information-feeds
              If you have been wondering how to obtain the maximum gain from RSS 
              feeds while being able to maintain a growing list of subscribers 
              my suggestion is to consider creating "private," premium, 
              fee-based RSS feeds to your preferred paying customers. 
              
              Simply offer a subscription box that collects for you the names 
              and emails of those who want to benefit from this free service. 
              Then send them a small newsreader preconfigured to read the RSS 
              feeds your customer has requested. (Send out in exchange for a reader 
              email both an effective newsreader and a list of RSS feeds to receive 
              automatically as soon as the tool is setup.) In this fashion, you 
              get to keep your growing mailing list, which remains of critical 
              importance to build business and marketing opportunities, while 
              simplifying the subscribers job of having to download a newsreader, 
              having to set it up and having to configure it to receive your feeds. 
              A bit too much indeed to ask from your patient and often non-technical 
              readers).
              
              Overall, RSS is the best method available today to receive news 
              updates, site changes and information feeds from your selected sources 
              while avoiding the usual amount of search, navigation and ancillary 
              interruption advertising required to receive most valuable content 
              online.
              
              References
              
              Email 
              is Dead -- Long Live RSS
              
              The End of E-Mail?, September 1, 2003  
             Is 
              RSS the Answer to the Spam Crisis? by Ryan Naraine 
              
              RSS 
              Feeds are the Better Email Newsletters
              
              Is 
              RSS Email's Savior - Or Just Overhyped?
              
              RSS 
              replacing email? email dead?
              
              RSS 
              and email(ing lists) links and references
              
              RSS 
              definition
              Short for RDF Site Summary or Rich Site Summary, an XML format for 
              syndicating Web content. A Web site that wants to allow other sites 
              to publish some of its content creates an RSS document and registers 
              the document with an RSS publisher. A user that can read RSS-distributed 
              content can use the content on a different site. Syndicated content 
              includes such data as news feeds, events listings, news stories, 
              headlines, project updates, excerpts from discussion forums or even 
              corporate information.