Logo Universalis
 
Saturday 22 November 2008
Saint Cecilia, Virgin, Martyr
 
About Today | Office of Readings | Morning Prayer | Evening Prayer | Night Prayer | Mass | Calendar
Using the Liturgy | Local calendars | About Universalis | Blog | Site map
Online: Web · Web feed (Atom) · Email   |   Your website: Banners · Syndication (RSS feed)
Your PC or Mac: Download/Install  |  Your mobile phone: WAP  |  Your handheld: AvantGo · Download/Install
Tomorrow: Christ the King
New: read our blog!

Universalis by web feed

Web feeds, often called "RSS feeds" because of the name of one of the popular feed formats, are a way of presenting changing content in a format that can be understood by a computer. That sounds rather abstract, so here is an example:

  1. A news site regularly publishes new news items for people to read on the Web. The site also publishes a web feed: this gives the most recent items in a machine-readable format.
  2. Live bookmarks: If your browser understands web feeds (the latest versions of Opera and Mozilla Firefox do; Internet Explorer 7 will) then you will see a little feed icon Feed icon in the address bar. Clicking on it creates a link (Firefox calls them "Live Bookmarks") that points to the summary. Your browser regularly checks to see if a new item has been published, and warns you in some way if it has. You don't need to keep on visiting a page to see if anything new has appeared on it.
  3. Browser plug-ins: Various plug-ins are available for some browsers that can do extra things for you, such as display a summary list of recent items or an elegantly formatted page that displays them all together. Sage Reader for Firefox is an excellent example.
  4. Feed readers: You can also install self-sufficient feed readers that are independent of your browser. Some are simple, some are very sophisticated, but they all let you combine news from various sources in one place. They don't depend on the browser understanding feeds, so you can carry on using Internet Explorer 6 if you want.
  5. Syndicating the content: "Syndication" means incorporating the items from a web feed into a web page of your own, so that your web page changes whenever a new item is published. If you have an account on My Yahoo!, you can customise your home page to incorporate syndicated items. An increasing number of other service providers are doing the same thing, and if you have your own web site then tools are available for incorporating external feeds into it.
  6. Email: You can subscribe to a feed-to-email service that sends you new items by email as they appear, so you don't have to use the Web at all.

Available Universalis feeds

We have programmed Universalis to behave like the news site in the example we've just given. We're providing just a few feeds until we know what people are really going to be using them for. (For the technically minded, all these feeds are in Atom 1.0 format, which all modern feed readers can understand).

Don't click on any of the links just yet until you've read the description in the following section.

Mass Readings (today)
Readings for today. Because "Today" means different things in different parts of the world (for instance, Thursday evening in America is Friday morning in Europe) you may need to check that Universalis knows which time zone you are in before you try using this link. If the time where you are is not Sat 9:33 pm then visit the Time Zones page and select your time zone from the list.
Mass Readings (3 days)
Readings for yesterday, today and tomorrow. This wider range means that you don't have to worry about time zones.
Weekly summary
The feast of the day, plus links to the Hours and Mass readings, for a week ahead.
3-day summary
The same, but for yesterday, today and tomorrow only.

Using these links

See also

Banners
If you are running a web site then you may like to incorporate graphical banners that display the feast of the day and link to Universalis. Here is an example:
Universalis banner

Cardbox home page  Site sponsored by Cardbox – "The database for real people"