How to create your own Feed Flare item

Mike Sansone, whose blog I’m happy to find, has made a nice post on how to create your own item to include at the end of each post in your RSS feed – a FeedFlare for Feedburner actually. Very nice. He figured it out so that he could add a “make a donation” link for the RSS feed for Interplast.

In depth instructions are also available on the Feedburner site.

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Mike Arrington of Tech Crunch on pitching bloggers

Listening to a low-audio-quality, high-value podcast interview with Mike Arrington of tech review super-blog Tech Crunch on how to promote your work to bloggers. Interview by Jeremy Pepper. Lots of good thoughts. Adding it to my archive of info on pitching bloggers. Interesting note, Arrington says that if you must use Bloglines to estimate the number of subscribers a blog has you should multiply the number there by 5 because it has 20% of the market share. That’s not what my experience has been, I see a formula more like Marnie Webb’s 2X estimate – but there’s another opinion for you.

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I love blummy.com

It’s been six months since I wrote about the fantastic meta-bookmarklet blummy.com, but I use it every day. It’s a system that allows you to drag and drop bookmarklets (like “save to del.icio.us”) into a box that then drops down from your browser every time you hit the blummy button.

I was just turning a client on to it and noticed that all kinds of new functions have been added. It’s not hard to add functions, I’ve added a number of tools to the system myself using drag and drop javascript or their very simple wizard. Here’s a glimpse at my blummy box – some of these things I didn’t even know were possible until I grabbed them and started using them. Fantastic! I can’t recommend this one highly enough.

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Adding email subscription

While making a variety of site design changes I’ve given in and decided to start offering e-mail subscription to this blog. While I wouldn’t encourage anyone to use email (RSS is essential) if that’s what you’d like, it’s now available. It’s also a chance to check out Feedburner’s own new e-mail service, which looks better than their partner services they’ve had for awhile. We’ll see how many subscriptions it gets!