(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Fauna & Flora International News Feeds
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20100713062400/http://www.fauna-flora.org/news_feeds.php
Click for Home Page PrintOnly

Fauna & Flora International News Feeds


Subscribe to one of our news RSS feeds and get FFI news updates delivered to you.

RSS All Fauna & Flora International News

RSS Fauna & Flora International News - Africa

RSSFauna & Flora International News - Americas

RSSFauna & Flora International News - Asia-Pacific

RSSFauna & Flora International News - Eurasia

RSS Fauna & Flora International media releases


What are News Feeds?

News feeds allow you to see when websites have added new content. You can get the latest headlines and video in one place, as soon as its published, without having to visit the websites you have taken the feed from.

Feeds are also known as RSS. There is some discussion as to what RSS stands for, but most people plump for 'Really Simple Syndication'. In essence, the feeds themselves are just web pages, designed to be read by computers rather than people.

How do I start using feeds?

In general, the first thing you need is something called a news reader. This is a piece of software that checks the feeds and lets you read any new articles that have been added. There are many different versions, some of which are accessed using a browser, and some of which are downloadable applications.

Browser-based news readers let you catch up with your RSS feed subscriptions from any computer, whereas downloadable applications let you store them on your main computer, in the same way that you either download your e-mail using Outlook, or keep it on a web-based service like Hotmail.

If you click on the RSS button you can subscribe to the feed in various ways, including by dragging the URL of the feed into your news reader or by cutting and pasting the same URL into a new feed in your news reader. Most sites that offer feeds use a similar orange button, but some may just have a normal web link.

Some browsers, including Firefox, Opera and Safari, automatically check for feeds for you when you visit a website, and display an icon when they find one. This can make subscribing to feeds much easier. For more details on these, please check their websites.

How do I get a news reader?

There is a range of different news readers available and new versions are appearing all the time.

Different news readers work on different operating systems, so you will need to choose one that will work with your computer.


Donate Online Save more graphic Photo: A mobile phone. We receive £5 for every phone sent to Fonebak in one of our marked envelopes. Look at our fonebak page for further details. Credit: Jeremy Holden.

Send your old mobile phone to our partner, Fonebak, and they'll recycle or re-use every phone - and donate £5 to FFI for every phone received. Please recycle your old phone.

Learn more graphic women shelling peanuts

Conservation and human rights are inextricably linked, read more about the Conservation Initiative on Human Rights of which FFI is a founder member