After you have an RSS feed reader and know how to subscribe to RSS feeds, how do you find feeds? There are a number of ways to find RSS feeds on the Internet after you have exhausted Search Engines and Directories.
When you subscribe to a number of RSS Feeds, the list of RSS feeds is typically stored in a OPML (Outline Processor Markup Language) file, which is another type of XML file. This OPML file is your reading list. Sometimes bloggers will refer to "my OPML" to mean the list of RSS feeds they subscribe to and read.
See OPML (Outline Processor Markup Language)
OPML RSS reading lists provide interesting options.
The following services summarize relevant, interesting, or popular blogs and feeds. These services publish interesting or popular blog posts from a wide range of blogs. Following these services will point to interesting individual blogs that have RSS feeds.
Memeorandum searches political blogs and combines blog posts on specific topics in a website and an RSS Feed. It is auto-updated every 5 minutes, and uncovers relevant items from thousands of news sites and blogs. There is also an RSS feed. Watching this website will reveal interesting political blogs with RSS feeds.
Blogniscient categorizes and ranks blog articles and blogs in real time, providing up-to-date information on the hottest blog entries..
Technorati scours the web to see what people are talking about right now.
When you download FeedDemon, it comes preset with a number of RSS Feeds. There are popular feeds in various categories, so one gets a jump start with a set of RSS Feeds.
IntraVnews and other RSS readers provide a default set of RSS Feeds to get one started.
You can create the ultimate personal RSS feed by doing the following.
Every time a news article with your name or company name appears in Google News, the feed in your RSS reader will automatically update.
Ego Searches and RSS - Article with various Search Engines that can be used to do ego searches to create RSS feeds.
Yahoo Groups now provides direct RSS feeds natively. If your preferred Yahoo Group is set for open, public viewing of the message archives, then you need only to add the extension "messages?rss=1" to the complete URL and you have a full RSS feed for that Yahoo Group. Click here for more detail.
I think the best approach is to build your RSS reading list gradually.