Ok, I’ve managed to create an RSS feed that combines all of the your blog RSS feeds into one “mega feed” if that will make it easier to add to a feed reader or a sidebar widget. This followed out of a conversation I had with Phillip; it’s much easier to read blog posts if they come to you rather than you having to go to them.
I used the service of FeedStitch in order to create this feed. It was pretty easy to do, and it’s a site you might want to bookmark.
Filed under: announcements, rss

Heck yeah! This is so freaking cool. I was just thinking about this. You are seriously the cooolest ever.
Why, thank you!
Thank you! I finally got it to work on its own page
I had to create a page template – or was that for the resources category – I’ve learned so much today I’m having a hard time keeping track.
I almost switched to the Grid Focus site! Nice.
Here’s my hosted site where I’ve been playing with a (very small – not much changes from the parent so far) child theme, creating and editing my child theme’s css file, functions.php, creating a page template (for the categories)… OH, I remember how I got feedstitch to work on a PAGE and not the sidebar – I learned how to show an rss feed with shortcode!! Shortcode can go right in the post. Plus I learned how to do sticky posts – so much to learn!
http://naturallygeeky.net/
Here’s that rss shortcode plugin site:
http://yoast.com/wordpress/rss-shortcode/
Ahh, “shortcode”…I have a feeling that is a new name for it. I’ve used it in the past but for the life of me when I searched for it I couldn’t find it! All three CMS’s have ways of dealing with and executing code within the main body of articles, posts, pages, and content. WordPress and Joomla usually require extensions and special code language whereas Drupal does this natively.
A very nice, neat plugin.