![]() Deleting a Google Alert from the Alerts pageĢ. The process for deleting a Google Alert is the same from your desktop or mobile device. You can delete a Google Alert using the same two methods for editing an alert: from the same /alerts page where you set up alerts, or from an email you receive as a Google Alert. (Begin by clicking on the pencil icon to edit.)Ĭlick on the pencil icon to begin editing your Google Alert. Complete the same steps for editing as detailed above. Open the Google Alert notification email.Ī Google Alert email will have options at the bottom for editing or deleting.ģ. Editing from a Google Alert email notificationġ. Make the desired changes to your alert or alert delivery by clicking on the dual arrows and selecting an alert setting option from the dropdown tabs.Ĭlick on the up and down arrows to display a dropdown with your options for alert delivery.Ĥ. Click on the pencil icon next to an alert.Ĭlick on the pencil icon next to an alert.ģ. Go to /alerts# to edit your Google Alerts.Ģ. You can easily edit a Google Alert from /alerts or by editing directly from a Google Alert email you receive. Click “Create Alert” when you are finished. Delivery method: Select which account will receive your alerts.ģ.Quality: Choose to receive what Google deems as “only the best results,” or select “All results.”.Location: Receive notifications from all regions, or select a specific country.Language: Select a language or ask for notifications from all languages. ![]() Sources: Opt to receive notifications from all sources, or customize to receive notifications from blogs, videos, or the news.Alert frequency: Choose to receive an alert as it happens, once a day, or once a week.From here, you can customize alert features by pressing the up and down arrows: Google’s options for customizing your alert.Ģ. Instead of clicking “Create Alert” as stated in Step 3 above, click on “Show Options.” Google allows you to customize your alert. Click “Create Alert.” How to customize your Google Alertġ. Type in the topic about which you would like to receive alerts.ģ. Type in the topic for which you wish to receive alerts. ![]() Note: All source images are from a personal Google account.Ģ. When you log in to /alerts, Google will ask if you want to create alerts based on your name. From your computer or mobile device, go to /alerts. This entry was tagged with feeddemon, rss, software by Mahmoud Al-Qudsi.To create a Google Alert, complete the following steps:ġ. Younger fans, please feel free to substitute the words of Albus Dumbledore instead: “You will find that I will only truly have left this school when none here are loyal to me.” ↩ It’s much the same with (true) desktop software (those not crippled by dependencies on web services or even activation servers) – source code optional. To think that a product officially discontinued in 2013 still remains the best option for browsing RSS feeds on the desktop, that games made for MS-DOS are still enjoyed every day in virtual machines and emulators, and that a web service that existed last week is gone forever. ![]() “That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons even death may die.” 1 Something the world seems to have forgotten – or more likely, hasn’t come around to appreciate just yet, is that unlike web-based software, desktop software generally doesn’t “die.” It can languish neglected, without updates or maintenance forevermore – but it’s never truly dead so long as there is even a single person out there that still uses it. (Another standout from the same era is RSSOwl, also still available.) While RSS isn’t quite dead yet, it’s not exactly as cool as it used to be and the RSS client scene hasn’t seen much activity in that time. Today, almost 12 years later to the day, I googled for “best RSS reader for Windows” while trying to write an RSS-based interface for an RRTP integration for Nest and FeedDemon was still the first result.įeedDemon “died” in March 2013, after Google killed off its own web-based RSS reader. I first discovered FeedDemon in the summer of 2004, probably via a promo or plugin in author Nick Bradbury’s other application, HomeSite, while “learning” HTML after ditching FrontPage. ![]()
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