One route to create an RSS feed that's not currently available is to configure one using Zapier, setting the source of the data as the trigger app ("when this happens") and the RSS as the action app ("then do this"). The data’s there, but you’ve got to make it work for you on your own. Some sites, like YouTube and Twitter, have turned off their public RSS feeds, and others simply have never had their updates in a feed. No matter how hard you try to find them, some sites just don’t publish their updates in RSS feeds. That should uncover a line like the following if so, copy the link after the href text, as that’s the feed you’re looking for. Open your browser’s source view or developers, and search for "rss+xml". If all else fails, you can always find feeds manually by looking at the source for the site. Or, you can use the RSS Auto-Detect bookmarklet to find feeds on sites, right-click the View original feed liank on the resulting page, and copy the feed URL from there. If you use a feed reader like Feedly and have their respective browser add-on or bookmarklet installed, you can just use them to see if there are feeds on the site, then copy the feed URL it discovers instead of subscribing to it. Otherwise, you’ll need to resort to other tools. RSS feed hard to locate? See our tips for how to find the RSS feed for almost any site.
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