What Newsreaders Are
Newsreaders are basically programs that let people gain access to the world of news. In a way, newsreaders retrieve the news that people prefer to read so that they would not have to manually retrieve them from their original sources. There are two kinds of newsreaders.
During the early times of the internet, which means just a decade ago, the term newsreader particularly referred to software that let users read newsgroups and UseNet – which are somewhat like online bulletins that keep people posted regarding what is happening with a particular area of interest whether it is about the wars in the middle east or Madonna’s latest album.
Nowadays, the term is also used to refer to news feed readers or aggregators, which in turn are programs that retrieve particular content called feeds. With news feed readers, people would just subscribe to a particular site or a particular section of the site, and the newsreader would automatically retrieve the updates.
What is the difference between the two?
The old newsreaders get news from a newsgroup. As said, newsgroups are like online bulletin boards where people send messages to be seen publicly. People subscribe to newsgroups to discuss a particular topic which could be either general – politics, science, music, business, or specific – Republicans, Mariah Carey, or Fortune 500 Companies. With newsgroups, the members themselves send the news to the server. When they learn of something new regarding the particular topic of interest, they can update the newsgroup members by posting a message.
On the other hand, news aggregators collect updates from any web content, be it a web site, a blog, or a podcast, that publishes web feeds. Users that like particular web content and would like to keep track of that content’s updates may just subscribe to it using their newsreader. Whenever something new happens to that content, the newsreader is automatically updated, letting the subscriber gain immediate access to the update. The beauty of news aggregators is that people may subscribe to just a particular part of the entire web content they like, thus they may choose to only get updates to that particular portion. This is like having a particular column delivered to them regularly, instead of receiving the whole newspaper all the time.
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