RSS feeds are one the things that I really like. It allows me to get the information I want, the way I want it. There is just one problem. Not every site offers an RSS feed, and those that do are not offering the right content.
This is something I wanted to do something about.

WEB2RSS is a simple web application that can convert almost any normal website/page into an RSS feed. If you want to receive updates in your feed reader when your favorite site changes, this is the tool for you.
Technical speaking WEB2RSS request the page you want, strips it from all non-text elements and output the rest into a RSS file. What you get is the content of any page, without form elements, script blocks, iframes etc.
Some examples: If one your friend's website does not offer an RSS feed, now it does. If you are really into the art of "Camera tossing" you can now search for it on Flickr and subscribe to the search results. ...or what about being kept up-to-date with the forum you visit frequently, or maybe just a specific topic. What about getting the latest updates to a seminar you are interested in - like the HCI class on Stanford University. Maybe, you just want to get the daily comic strip from your favorite cartoonist, or the latest news from your favorite hokey team.

Or, what about getting Google search results as a RSS feed, or when Google publishes something new on Google Labs. ...or maybe you just want to know when you competitors publishes new content.
You can do all of these things with WEB2RSS.
Using WEB2RSS is pretty simple. Type in the URL you want to use, check the link and... Boom (as Steve Jobs would say) you get RSS link you can subscribe to.

There are a number of more advanced features that you can use. The easiest one is "Include Images". By default, all images are removed from the feed to prevent layout images to clutter up the results. A common problem on table based sites. But, you can force it to include images if you want to do that.
The two other advanced settings are much harder to deal with. They are "Match" and "Exclude". With these you can either match a specific part of a page. If you want to get only a specific image, DIV or table, this is what you use. You can do the same with "Exclude", except it will remove the element you define instead of keeping it.
The hard part of these two settings is that they function using something called "Regular Expressions". If you do not know what this is, my best advice is to not use them. Regular Expression is a very complex beast, but it makes the "WEB2RSS" very flexible and powerful.
Yes, of course. There is a number of things that can prevent a successful conversion. Like:

It does work very well with simple table based sites, and - of course - all the sites that is designed using XHTML and CSS.
WEB2RSS is released as a beta primarily because of worries about scalability. I am not sure how the server will react to heavy use if it. I need some real life usage to know more.
... and let me know what you think. General comments can be posted here, on this page. Use this page for bugs and feature requests.

Here is a brilliant idea. What if your furniture could react intelligently to your presence and anticipate when you need it. Or what if it could move out of your way out of the way when you are just passing by? What if your furniture could help out in social situation? Wouldn’t that be something?

There are many online image editors. Like Picnik (which was recently bought by Google), Pixlr, Aviary Phoenix, Photoshop online and many others. All them require that you go to their website to edit your images. Wouldn't it be interesting if you could bring the online image editor into your own web apps.?
Back in late October 2009, Adobe Labs showcased an upcoming feature in Photoshop called Content Aware Fill. And it was absolutely amazing. Now they have released another video, showcasing even more impressive image manipulations.

Earlier this week Penguin presented their vision for how they could translate their book into the ebook format. Or rather, how they can really make us of digital publishing to create much better books.

Remember Microsoft Surface? You know, the big multi-touch coffee table? Now Microsoft is working on a much smaller version with Mobile Surface.

Today, Microsoft announced "Windows Phone 7 Series", featuring a completely new edition to the long infamous Windows Mobile operating system. It looks modern, polished, graphically exciting and nothing like the tiny windows 95 that we have been used to seeing.

The newspaper industry is falling over themselves in the fight to come up with a ever more impressive newspaper tablet. The problem is that they miss the point completely (as I wrote about in "The Future of News, Tablets, and Business Models").

As you probably know, both Google and Microsoft have entered into a partnership with Twitter and is now incorporating social search into their regular search engines. This is a big deal because social is a very important element of the future of search... it's not the only part though.

Wouldn't you like to mix wild hand gestures, cute birds flying around your screen, Twitter, tweeting bird sounds, and your web camera? Well, now you can with Flyar.
A number of people have pointed me towards PhotoSketch, a research/student project from Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, at National University of Singapore (now there is a mouthful).