Full-Text RSS 3.4
The new version of our Full-Text RSS application is now available. Full-Text RSS is our article extraction and partial-to-full-text-feed conversion application. You can try it out now, or read on to find out what’s new.
The new version of our Full-Text RSS application is now available. Full-Text RSS is our article extraction and partial-to-full-text-feed conversion application. You can try it out now, or read on to find out what’s new.
Our Full-Text RSS application can extract article content in web pages through a combination of automatic content detection and site-specific extraction rules.
When a user encounters a problem extracting content from a particular site, we usually point them to our help page for writing custom extraction rules. That can not only be quite time consuming, but to do it, we assume users have an understanding of HTML and XPath.
The new version of Full-Text RSS, our tool to extract article content from web pages and transform partial web feeds into full-text feeds, is now available to try and buy. A few of the main changes are described below.
We’re getting ready to release the new version of Full-Text RSS, our tool to extract article content from web pages and transform partial web feeds into full-text feeds.
Later in the year we will discontinue our Reading List service in favour of Wallabag.
We’ve just released a new version of PDF Newspaper, our tool to create printable versions of web articles and feeds. Here’s what’s new.
If you’ve ever wanted to treat set of links on a website as a web feed (so you can subscribe and be notified of updates), you might find our new feed creation tool useful.
You can use the tool to create a feed from almost any publicly accessible webpage. That includes…
We have a small stand at the Gothenburg Book Fair this year.
As you may have heard, Google is shutting down Google Reader on July 1 2013.
We’ve put up a new experimental service to help you create RSS feeds for sites which do not offer their own.