> Now, with the advent of Agentic AI they seem to be an old fashioned way that is needed anymore.
One of the main reasons I use RSS is to assemble a news feed that I read. It's hard to see how Agentic AI can improve on that.
Why having an easy way to organise a data feed that will work even on cheapest clients and servers, when you can simply boil a tank of water to get a half-assed hallucination loosely based on the source, right?
I have seen people trying to bury RSS for the past 15 years — didn’t happen yet. It is still widely used by blog enthusiasts — that’s basically how I get information about new posts from my favourite old-tech authors.
Many sites have rss, it‘s just not advertised as much as it was some years ago. I built a feed finder tool that goes far beyond rss autodiscover, it might be useful: https://lighthouseapp.io/tools/feed-finder
And an article how it works: https://lighthouseapp.io/blog/deep-dive-finding-rss-feeds
This is a bit surprising for me. I've just randomly checked news: BBC, Guardian, Norwegian NRK - all had RSS. But I'm not checking news that much so not sure about others. Mastodon and BlueSky are also providing RSS. I guess walled garden ones like Instagram/Twitter don't?
My RSS reader is subscribed to:
- one Youtube channel
- several blogs (most blogs do have RSS, for example Wordpress provide it by default)
- Hacker News (few keyword-based feeds)
- Gitlab and Codeberg projects (Github provides RSS, but I'm not currently subscribed to any, because I need to be logged there anyway)
- podcasts (podcasts are basically just RSS)
- few Mobilizon sites for events
- OpenStreetMap QA tool that checks my edits
- two subreddits
Maybe in general, you are right. I know just my bubble and even there are few sites without RSS (like Bandcamp).