Old DFSX Show Playlists!
Editor: David Tanny



Navigate: Main Old DFSX Show Playlists Page

The playlists are available in two different formats: XML (which is most common) and Javascript. Click this feed right now:

XML Feed: http://www.dfsxradio.com/9200.xml

Click Here to Read the Instructions to see how adding the DFSX RSS Feeds to your IE7 RSS Feeds and Windows Vista Headlines Widget looks lile.

JavaScript Feed: http://www.dfsxradio.com/9200.js

To add the JavaScript feed of the Dementia Top 20 Countdown Show Playlists on your personal website, all you have to do is to use this code:

<script language="JavaScript" SRC="http://www.dfsxradio.com/9200.js">
</script>

Copy the code and place it on a webpage of your choice, then upload and publish. When the playlist javascript on dfsxradio.com is updated, your website will be automatically updated, so there's no need to do any further editing on your website.

What are those little blue and orange boxes ( ) on some pages of dfsxradio.com?

The blue and orange boxes mean that DFSXRadio.com's breaking radio show playlists are available for syndication as an RSS feed for your RSS reader, and as a JavaScript feed for use on personal websites.

XML is a computer language that makes the process of publishing news quick and easy and is simply one way to make content available.

What is RSS?

RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication." It's a format that web sites and weblogs (blogs) use to syndicate content via news aggregation tools and services. Syndication benefits users -- instead of visiting multiple web sites to see what's new, they can simply scan headlines or brief article summaries and click to read the full text. "Really Simple" refers to how easy it is for publishers to make their content available to readers in this format.

Because RSS is relatively new on the Internet, not all sites syndicate their content. However, many notable sites already do offer RSS, and every day the RSS offering grows. For example, search engines such as Yahoo.com (http://news.yahoo.com/rss/) and news sites such as the AP and Reuters use RSS to syndicate news headlines and abstracts. Other sites use RSS to alert customers of new products or upcoming events.

How do people use RSS feeds?

News aggregators (or news readers) are the most common use of RSS feeds, and there are several types. Web aggregators (sometimes called portals) make this view available in a web page; My Yahoo is a well-known example of this. Aggregators have also been integrated into e-mail clients and onto users' desktops, or released as standalone, dedicated software. Aggregators can offer a variety of special features, including combining several related feeds into a single view, hiding items that the viewer has already seen, and categorizing feeds and items.

Another way many people use RSS feeds is by incorporating content into blogs. Blogs are web pages comprised of usually short, frequently updated items and web links. Blogging as a publishing tool is used for many purposes: traditional journalism, personal journals, group discussions around a topic, and many combinations in-between.

Other uses of RSS feeds include site tracking by search engines and other software; because the feed is machine-readable, the search software doesn't have to figure out which parts of the site are important and which parts are just the navigation and presentation. It is possible to allow people to republish your feeds on their Web sites, giving them the ability to represent content as they require.

The feeds are provided free of charge for use by any website including commercial websites.

In exchange for implied permission to carry our RSS and JavaScript feeds on your website, we ask that you provide attribution to DFSXRadio.com in connection with your use of the feeds.

If you provide this attribution in text, please use: "DFSXRadio.com Playlists." If you provide this attribution with a graphic, please use the DFSXRadio.com logo that we have included in the feed itself.

We reserve all rights in and to the DFSXRadio.com logo, and your right to use the DFSXRadio.com logo is limited to providing attribution in connection with these RSS feeds.

Please do not alter the feeds for display. We want our website sponsors and affilliate links seen on this website to be attributed for their work.

DFSXRadio.com also reserves the right to require you to cease distributing these feeds at any time for any reason.

[Valid RSS] This is how the JavaScript feed for these shows are displayed on a webpage.

To add the JavaScript feed on your personal website (sorry, Myspace doesn't allow it), all you have to do is to use this code:

<script language="JavaScript" SRC="http://www.dfsxradio.com/9200.js">
</script>

Navigate: Main Old DFSX Show Playlists Page

(DFSX Comedy Radio is Established on Feb 3, 2000, providing 24 hours of comedy, novelty, and fun music of all genres.)

© 1999-2008. San Diego Radio News, Dave's Radio Waves, Cal Radio News, DFS News, Comedy Music News, Funny Music News, Dementia Top 20, DT20, Demented Song Almanacs, Demented Datebooks, Random Access Radio, Radio Wires, DFSX Comedy Radio, DFSX Fun Radio, DFSXRadio.com, I Still Get Demented, ISGD, On Radio San Diego, Backwaves: The Readers Strike Back, and others are terms associated with this website.


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