As long as this RSS support you're all speaking of doesn't serve to bloat Camino with useless features thus making the app slow or anything. I thought I'm using a browser here, not the all-in-one-app-of-doom.
On 2/26/06, Wevah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > This is pretty much exactly what's being worked on for Camino now. > > On Feb 26, 2006, at 11:33, Noemi Millman wrote: > > > > >> Or, one could do the <editorial comment>"Safari cop-out"</editorial > >> comment> and make the user go to the site, then read it's RSS feed. > >> If I'm already AT the NYTijmes web site, I can see what's available > >> right on there front page; what does then going to their RSS feed get > >> me that already isn't in front of my face? This seems to be a dead > >> simple thing to do... > > > > What I'd find useful, personally, would be an RSS discovery tool -- > > i.e. I'm reading a site, I'm interested in its feed, Camino makes it > > easy to locate the feed -- then I just have to click a button or a > > link to view the feed in / add it to my feedreader of choice. If I > > can't read my feeds directly in the browser, then there's no need to > > be able to use the browser to see when they've been updated -- it > > makes much more sense to use a feedreader for everything except > > finding them in the first place. > > _______________________________________________ > > Camino mailing list > > [email protected] > > http://mozdev.org/mailman/listinfo/camino > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Camino mailing list > [email protected] > http://mozdev.org/mailman/listinfo/camino > _______________________________________________ Camino mailing list [email protected] http://mozdev.org/mailman/listinfo/camino
