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Wired RSS feed isn't working in Safari...
#1
Over the last month or so, I've been addicted to the Wired RSS feed from the News-->Wired toolbar in Safari. I was getting at least 20-30 stories a day on the feed, but lately it has dropped to one a day (at midnight). Does anyone else know what the story is, or how I can reset it, or if it is simply a feed problem? I don't know much about RSS feeds to begin with. Here's the direct link, from Safari:

feed://wired.com/news/feeds/rss2/0,2610,3,00.xml

Cheers!

-Tofer
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#2
I highlighted your link, right-clicked and chose Go To Address and got this (lots of stories):



April 8, 1935: WPA Puts Millions Back to Work
Today, 12:00 AM
President Roosevelt's successful New Deal program gives blue-collar laborers (plus musicians and other artistic types) a boost during the Great Depression. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
April 7, 1969: Birth of That Thing We Call the Internet
Yesterday, 12:00 AM
The publication of the first “request for comments,” or RFC, documents paves the way for the information highway. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
April 6, 1909: Peary Claims North Pole, But Is the Claim Legit?
Friday, 12:00 AM
April 6, 1909: Peary claims that he's first to reach the North Pole. Read more…
April 5, 1951: Happy Birthday, Mr. Pied Piper of Technology
Thursday, 12:00 AM
April 5, 1951: Happy birthday, Mr. Pied Piper of Technology.... Read more…
April 4, 1581: Francis Drake Knighted by His Grateful Queen
Wednesday, 12:00 AM
April 4, 1581: Francis Drake is knighted by his grateful queen. Read more…
April 3, 1996: Unabomber Nabbed in His Montana Hideout
Tuesday, 12:00 AM
April 3, 1996: The Unabomber is nabbed in his Montana hideout. Read more…
Light Therapy Spares the Scalpel and the Chemo
Monday, 12:00 AM
A combination light and drug treatment could save many from suffering through chemotherapy. Read more…
April 2, 1845: Photographing the Sun, Measuring Speed of Light
Monday, 12:00 AM
A couple of French physicists are the first to try their hand at photographing the sun. After that, they devise methods for measuring the speed of light. Read more…
April 2, 1845: Photographing the Sun, Measuring Speed of Light
Monday, 12:00 AM
A couple of French physicists are the first to try their hand at photographing the sun. After that, they devise methods for measuring the speed of light. Read more…
March 30, 1842: It's Lights Out, Thanks to Ether
Mar 30, 12:00 AM
Ether is used for the first time to anesthetize a patient before surgery. Read more…
Obsessive Geniuses Strive to Create Almost Human Robots
Jenn Shreve
Mar 29, 12:00 AM
Lee Gutkind's new book, Almost Human: Making Robots Think, explores the brilliant minds working on humanlike machines. Wired News interview by Jenn Shreve. Read more…
March 29, 1989: The Louvre Gets a Brand New Look
Mar 29, 12:00 AM
What would Voltaire have thought? I.M. Pei's glass pyramids open in the courtyard of the Louvre, and Parisians are appalled. Read more…
Fusion Experiments Show Nuclear Power's Softer Side
Rob Beschizza
Mar 29, 12:00 AM
All but abandoned twenty years ago, nuclear energy is again hot news. But while new fission reactors vie with wind turbines and biofuels to raise the old NIMBY hackles, some look to a future where atoms are spliced, not split. Read more…
March 28, 1979: Reactor Meltdown at Three Mile Island
Mar 28, 12:00 AM
First the equipment fails at Three Mile Island, then the humans do. The result is the worst nuclear accident in U.S. history. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
March 27, 1794: It's Anchors Aweigh for the U.S. Navy
Mar 27, 12:00 AM
March 27, 1794: It's Anchors Aweigh for the U.S. Navy Read more…
Intel's Big Chinese Chip Factory
Mar 26, 12:00 PM
Intel is sinking $2.5 billion into a chip factory in Dalian, underscoring the company's belief that China is the biggest cash cow out there. By the Associated Press. Read more…
March 26, 1999: Melissa
Mar 26, 12:00 PM
A computer virus named for a lap dancer is unleashed on an unsuspecting world. Panic ensues. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
March 26, 1999: 'Melissa' Wreaks Havoc on Net
Mar 26, 12:00 AM
The "Melissa" worm makes a sudden appearance, screwing up specific e-mail programs by clogging them with infected e-mails issuing from the worm. It is the first successful mass-mailing worm. Read more…
March 25, 1655: Moon Over Saturn
Mar 25, 05:00 AM
Saturn's largest moon, and the second largest satellite in our solar system, is discovered by accident. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
March 23, 1983: Reagan Taunts the Russians With 'Star Wars' Plan
Tony Long
Mar 23, 12:00 AM
1983: President Reagan announces his "Star Wars" missile-defense program. Read more…
Pentagon Preps Mind Fields for Smarter War Stations
Mar 21, 12:00 AM
Researchers want to develop smart cockpits and control stations that can sense what soldiers are thinking and adjust to maximize efficiency. By Noah Shachtman. Read more…
Pentagon Preps Mind Fields for Smarter War Stations
Mar 21, 12:00 AM
Researchers want to develop smart cockpits and control stations that can sense what soldiers are thinking and adjust to maximize efficiency. By Noah Shachtman. Read more…
March 21, 1963: The Rock
Mar 21, 12:00 AM
In its day, the federal prison at Alcatraz was where they kept the rottenest apples in the barrel. But time, and the weather, have taken their toll. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
March 20, 1933: Dachau
Mar 20, 12:00 AM
The Nazis establish their first concentration camp outside a quaint Bavarian village not far from Munich. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
Google's Next-Gen of Sneakernet
Mar 20, 12:00 AM
For scientists dealing in terabytes of data, Google offers help. There's 'FedExNet" for those times when it absolutely, positively has to be there overnight (or thereabouts). By Cyrus Farivar. Read more…
March 19, 1945: Blow It All Up
Mar 19, 12:00 AM
Adolf Hitler issues his "Nero Decree," calling for the destruction of Germany's entire infrastructure in order to leave only a wasteland for the Allies. Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
Green Dream: Shrink-Wrapped Trash
Mar 19, 12:00 AM
TransLoad America is building a new garbage disposal system that wraps refuse in plastic and moves it by rail. The ultimate goal? Turning landfills into fuel cells. By Alexander Gelfand. Read more…
March 17, 1845: Stretch It
Mar 17, 12:00 AM
There's beauty in simplicity. Is there anything simpler than the rubber band? Compiled by Tony Long. Read more…
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#3
I agree something is fouled up - all we now seem to be getting is the top headline stories. But I'm not sure how to correct the situation. I also noticed the Wired story links from NetNewsWire Lite seem to load faster, and seem to be formatted differently, with the article lines flush to the left of the margin. I also noticed it says "Wired BETA" in the heading of the website.

LyleH
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#4
[quote The UnDoug]I highlighted your link, right-clicked and chose Go To Address and got this (lots of stories):
Normally, there are 30+ stories per day -- the current list has one story per day. I don't know what the issue is...

-Tofer
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