Categories: Tutorials

Feeds in IBM Lotus Notes 8.5

4 min read

(For more resources on IBM, see here.)

Adding feeds

A web feed is also known as RSS Feed. RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication and provides people with frequently updated content from websites. Content distributors syndicate a web feed, thereby allowing users to subscribe to it. Typically, feeds provide people with a summary of any recently added information or content such as a news headlines or blog entries to a website.

Most often there are several sites that we want to subscribe to and there are tools that allow us to subscribe to these websites and have those feeds come into one place. Such a tool or software is known as a feed reader or aggregator.

Many companies including news-related sites, blog sites, and many government and corporate sites distribute their content as web feeds. To know if a website is enabled for feed subscriptions, look for the feeds icon. The examples below can be placed anywhere on the website, however, typically we will see them placed somewhere on the first page.

Often we can select what we want to subscribe to—for example, if it is a blog website, then we may be able to subscribe to the content or the comments that people make; on the other hand, if it is a news website, then we can select if we want content on sports or business. When we enable our subscription, we select how often we want to be updated and how long we want to keep the information. We will look into this in more detail further on in the article.

Feeds sidebar panel

Feeds can be accessed and managed from within the Lotus Notes sidebar(Details about sidebar is out of the scope of this article).The following is a screenshot of the Lotus Notes client with the Feeds sidebar expanded:

If we can’t see the Feeds sidebar panel, select View | Right Sidebar Panel and select Feeds. The Feeds panel can be collapsed by clicking click on Feeds in the sidebar. If we click on another panel in the sidebar such as the Day-At-A-Glance, then Feeds will close and we will see Day-At-A-Glance panel expanded in the sidebar. If we want to display our feeds separately, we can select Open in New Window when we right-click the Feeds option in the panel.

Indentifying feed-enabled websites

First, we need to identify if the website we are visiting has enabled syndication of its content (the fancy way of saying you can subscribe to it). We can tell if a website or blog syndicates its content by the feed icons displayed on the site, usually on the front page.

We may also see the feed icon in the navigation toolbar of our browser. The following is an example of a web blog by Ed Brill, who is the Director of Product Management at IBM Lotus Software:

The following is an example of a news website, USA Today:

Both of these websites allow us to subscribe using feeds.

Alternatively, on the USA Today website, we also see an area at the bottom of the front page that gives choices for subscriptions—the RSS option is circled in red.

Once we have identified a website that is RSS enabled, there are a number of ways to add it to our Lotus Notes feed reader.

Adding feeds to Lotus Notes

Let’s use the USA Today website as an example. There are a three different ways we can add feeds to Lotus Notes.

  1. Click on the RSS icon which, in the case of USA Today, is available on the first page of their website.
  2. Add the feed using any of the following techniques:
    • Drag the RSS icon to the area where feeds are listed in our Feeds sidebar panel (make sure you hold your left mouse button down). This will open the Add New Subscription dialog box in Lotus Notes.

    • Rather than dragging the RSS icon, this time click on it. This will take us to another web page. Select the URL on that web page and copy it to the clip board. Then go to Lotus Notes and select the Subscribe to Feed button in the Feeds sidebar panel. The Add New Subscription dialog box will now appear. Paste the URL into the space provided and then click the Go button.

  3. We can select our preferred options from within the Add New Subscription dialog box such as:
    • Which feeds we want to subscribe to if it’s a multiple feed name—for example, the selected feed name in the following screenshot is Top Headlines, which I would change to USA Today Top Headlines.
    • How often to check for updates.
    • How long to keep entries.

  4. Once we have selected all our choices, click the OK button. This will close the Add New Subscription dialog box and add that feed to the Feeds sidebar panel.

Once we have added a subscription, we are given a choice as to how often we want the feeds to be updated and how long to keep entries for.

The choices available in the Check for Updates drop-down list are:

  • Every minute
  • Every 10 or 30 minutes
  • Every hour (default)
  • Every 2, 4 or 8 hours
  • Every day
  • Once a week
  • Manual (only check for updates manually)

The choices for Keep entries for are:

  • 1 day
  • 1 week (default)
  • 2 weeks
  • 1 month
  • 2 months
  • Forever (only delete entries manually)
Packt

Share
Published by
Packt

Recent Posts

Top life hacks for prepping for your IT certification exam

I remember deciding to pursue my first IT certification, the CompTIA A+. I had signed…

3 years ago

Learn Transformers for Natural Language Processing with Denis Rothman

Key takeaways The transformer architecture has proved to be revolutionary in outperforming the classical RNN…

3 years ago

Learning Essential Linux Commands for Navigating the Shell Effectively

Once we learn how to deploy an Ubuntu server, how to manage users, and how…

3 years ago

Clean Coding in Python with Mariano Anaya

Key-takeaways:   Clean code isn’t just a nice thing to have or a luxury in software projects; it's a necessity. If we…

3 years ago

Exploring Forms in Angular – types, benefits and differences   

While developing a web application, or setting dynamic pages and meta tags we need to deal with…

3 years ago

Gain Practical Expertise with the Latest Edition of Software Architecture with C# 9 and .NET 5

Software architecture is one of the most discussed topics in the software industry today, and…

3 years ago