.
List of RSS feeds
available:
- All groups,
sectors, regions, languages...in ONE: Use our "get it all"
feed!:

- All UNI News in
English

- Todas las noticias
de la UNI en Español

- Toutes les
nouvelles d'UNI en français

- UNI News

- UNI Press Releases

- UNI In Depth
(Solidarity, Campaigns, Child Labour, Health & Safety etc...)

- UNI Development
& Regions' Department

- UNI-Africa

- UNI-Americas

- UNI-Asia &
Pacific

- UNI-Europa

- UNI Commerce

- UNI Finance

- UNI Gaming

- UNI Graphical
and Europa Graphical 
- UNI Hair &
Beauty

- UNI IBITS

- UNI MEI

- UNI Postal

- UNI Property
Services (Cleaning and Security)
- UNI Social
Insurance & Private Health Care
- UNI Telecom

- UNI Tourism

- UNI Professional
and Managerial Staff

- UNI Women

- UNI Youth

What is RSS? Why do I
need an RSS feedreader on my computer?
See
List of news aggregators for a list of clients for various operating systems
A good start could be:
http://www.rssreader.com/download.htm
(it's free!)
(source: http://www.wikipedia.org)
RSS is used to provide items containing short descriptions of web content
together with a link to the full version of the content. This information is
delivered as an XML file called RSS feed, RSS stream, or RSS channel. An
orange rectangle with the letters XML (XML iconic button) or RSS (RSS iconic
button) is often used as a link to a site's RSS feed.
In 2004 and 2005, use of RSS spread to many major news organizations,
including Reuters and the Associated Press, after several years of use by
weblogs, technology publications and other early adopters. The first online
news site to use RSS feeds was Variety.com in June of 2002. Under various
usage agreements, providers allow other websites to incorporate their
"syndicated" headline or headline-and-short-summary feeds.
RSS is widely used by the weblog community to share the latest entries'
headlines or their full text, and even attached multimedia files. (See
podcasting, broadcatching and MP3 blogs.)
A program known as a feed reader or aggregator can check RSS-enabled
webpages on behalf of a user and display any updated articles that it finds.
RSS saves users from having to repeatedly visit favorite websites to check for
new content or be notified of updates via email. It is now very common to find
RSS feeds on most major web sites, as well as many smaller ones.
Feed Readers or news aggregators are typically constructed as extensions to a
web browser, as extensions to an email program, or as standalone programs.
Some programs now also have native support of RSS and/or Atom.
Web-based feed readers and news aggregators require no software installation
and make the user's "feeds" available on any computer with Web
access.
Some aggregators syndicate (combine) RSS feeds into new feeds, e.g. take all
football related items from several sports feeds and provide a new football
feed.
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