communication. community. cognition.
Starving for a Feed
Yay!
The city of Birmingham has stepped up with a new website!
(mmm… new website… pretty colors… tasty… mmm…)
So, I was clicking around, looking for the RSS feed for news and updates…
Nothing.
One step forward, one step back.
I’ll be getting in touch with someone at the city, to see if there are some feeds on the drawing board. It is a brand new rollout, after all — and timed to the beginning of the year, there might have been a few things left unfinished.
While I’m at it, I’ll suggest a page where people can download and mindlessly install the appropriate widgets so those feeds will keep residents connected to the news.
It would be a great advance in transparent government. And if that should fall on deaf ears…
[tags]Ike Pigott, Occam’s RazR, Birmingham, Alabama, RSS, government, transparency[/tags]
| Print article | This entry was posted by Ike on January 3, 2008 at 4:49 am, and is filed under Communication, Personal. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |


about 4 years ago
It doesn’t look like there’s much content that would be suitable for an RSS feed at this point, so you’re not just asking them to create the technical tools needed, but rather asking them to create/convert content. I’m not saying it is a bad idea, but it is a more ambitious undertaking for many government agencies where approvals are even hairier than in big corporations.
about 4 years ago
True Chip… but you would think there would be an RSS feed at the very least for the Press Release archive.
Which is empty, by the way.
I’m going to give it time.
about 4 years ago
I couldn’t even find the press release archive (just found it by searching for that exact text), so I guess that could be an issue, too!
about 4 years ago
Yeah, RSS feeds are good. Just the other day, I was checking out my former employer’s new website. For an organization as large as it is — one of the nation’s largest statewide community colleges serving 111,000 student on 23 campuses, the student blogs are contrived and the videos used for promotional purposes look like a third grader produced them. The site is just awful and an embarrassment.