HOW TO read mailing lists as RSS feeds hack...

Images-160 Here's an overview of a clever email-to-RSS hack I was forwarded. If you subscribe to an email mailing list, you can set blogger.com posting to the email address you signed up with. So, each time you get an email, it'll post that to a blog you have set up. Then blogger.com automatically has a feed you can subscribe to. (Make sure it's not a private mailing list of course.)

Recent Entries

Comments

Oldest comments listed first.

Posted by: stevehar on August 4, 2005 at 8:10 PM

maybe It is the hour I'm reading your post but...
I request you illustrate this circular process and describe
-why you would want to do this and
-why you won't anoy a whole lot of people that you signed up to but they didn't signup to your feed.

Could you run this again with a purpose description and a lucid example.
Might be cool; might be dreadful but it is hard to tell in the abstract

Thanks!


Posted by: tombou on August 4, 2005 at 8:30 PM

Gmail also has RSS feeds. If you have an email account that only has on e list subscribed to it, then you can get the subjects from RSS.


Posted by: jacksonwest on August 4, 2005 at 8:47 PM

OMFG, I made a lazyweb request for this on my blog a few weeks ago. It's so simple! I feel very stupd, but happy.

Actually, if you're a mailing list administrator, this is really elegant, because all you have to do is set up a dummy blogger blog, add the posting email to your list, and then you can instantly offer an RSS feed to your subscribers who are interested for 100% free (not to mention an archive page). I have a PR friend who may just get a promotion for this...

To address stevehar's concern, the idea is that you create a personal blog, and then use the posting email addy everytime you subscribe to an email list. Then you just subscribe to the personal blog's feed in your RSS reader, and then the subscription emails don't clog your inbox. Anytime you want to refresh the list, you just change the blog's posting addy and the subscriptions will cease. Delete the blog and the RSS feed disappears.

What I'm curious is how it's going to handle HTML emails, multipart attachements, etc.


Posted by: John_Resig on August 4, 2005 at 9:28 PM

tombou was almost there - Gmail also has a hidden feature: Atom feeds for Labels! The technique is simple:

Setup a filter to catch all email from a specific mailing list.
Apply a label to all of that mail (e.g. 'list').
Access the Atom feed via this URL: https://mail.google.com/mail/feed/atom/list/ (changing 'list' to be the name of the label.

It really is that simple - and there's no need to create extra accounts, or anything silly like that.


Posted by: larsks on August 5, 2005 at 2:33 AM

Or just use Bloglines, which offers email-to-RSS suitable for use on private as well as public mailing lists. And also package tracking via RSS, and one of the best general purposes RSS aggregators out there.


Posted by: deus_x on August 5, 2005 at 11:29 AM

There's also mailbucket, which has been around for a few years now: Send email to foo@mailbucket.org and pick it up at http://www.mailbucket.org/foo.xml. Much simpler.

In addition, there's dodgeit, which provides something pretty similar.

And, lastly, there's this scraper for Mailman archives, which I've got in use on the Greasemonkey, del.icio.us, and Python web-sig lists right now.


Posted by: LAME on August 5, 2005 at 3:40 PM

How is that a "hack?"


Posted by: RodrigoCouto on August 6, 2005 at 7:53 PM

What about Gmane (gmane.org)? It has archives of several mailing lists and allow us to read it from RSS feeds. Actually they have 4 types of RSS for each list:

- All messages from the list, with excerpted texts.
- Topics from the list, with excerpted texts.
- All messages from the list, with complete texts.
- Topics from the list, with complete texts.

But again, I think it only works for public mailing lists.


Posted by: glenn weissman on December 10, 2008 at 12:33 PM

Mr

I have been doing some searching and I can find email to RSS programs. However, I am seeking a program that will parse an email address out of an RSS - does anyone know of anything out there that does that?


Leave a comment


Subscribe to MAKE!Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.

$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)

Subscribe now


Void your warranty, violate a user agreement, fry a circuit, blow a fuse, poke an eye out. Make: The risk-takers, the doers, the makers of things... Welcome to Make: Online!


CRAFT Maker Shed Maker Faire MAKE television
MAKE: en EspaƱol MAKE: Japan


Check out all of the episodes of Make: television

Make: Science Room

Connect with MAKE

Be a MAKE fan on Facebook MAKE on Facebook
Visit our Facebook page and become a fan of MAKE!
MAKE on Twitter MAKE on Twitter
Follow our MAKE tweets!
MAKE Flickr Pool MAKE on Flickr
Join our MAKE Flickr Pool!
    make_tips on Twitter

    MAKE's RSS feed is here.
    Add MAKE to iGoogle - GoogleGoogle.
    How to add MAKE to your RSS reader - Real simple.
    Add MAKE on FriendFeed




    Maker SHED

    Advertise here with FM.

    Why advertise on MAKE?
    Read what folks are saying about us!

    Click here to advertise on MAKE!



    Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

    Make: Online authors!

    Gareth BranwynGareth Branwyn
    Senior Editor


    Phillip TorronePhillip Torrone
    Senior Editor
    | AIM | Twitter


    Becky SternBecky Stern
    Associate Editor
    | AIM | Twitter


    Marc de VinckMarc de Vinck
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter


    John ParkJohn Park
    Contributing Writer
    | Twitter


    Sean RaganSean Ragan
    Contributing Writer
    | Twitter


    Matt MetsMatt Mets
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter


    Dale DoughertyDale Dougherty
    Editor & Publisher
    | Twitter


    Shawn ConnallyShawn Connally
    Managing Editor
    | Twitter


    Goli MohammadiGoli Mohammadi
    Associate Managing Editor

    Kip KayKip Kay
    Weekend Projects
    | AIM | Twitter


    Collin CunninghamCollin Cunningham
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter

    Adam FlahertyAdam Flaherty
    Contributing Writer
    | AIM | Twitter



    More contributors: Mark Frauenfelder (Editor-in-Chief, MAKE magazine), Kipp Bradford (Technical Consultant/Writer), Chris Connors (Education), Diana Eng (Guest Author), Peter Horvath (Intern), Brian Jepson (O'Reilly Media), Robert Bruce Thompson (Science Room)

    Suggest a Site!

    Current Podcast

    itunesdl.gif Weekend Project: Making Char Cloth Learn how to make a cheap and effective fire starter made from an old t-shirt. To download The Char Cloth video click here and subscribe in iTunes. See Char Cloth in action with the Fire Piston from William Gurstelle.... More...

    Get the Make: Online sent via email
    Enter your email to receive Make: Online each day:



    MAKE Fascination video series brought to you by Dow

    Make: Education

    Important please read


    Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!

    Recent Posts from the Craft: Blog