Go to a Cal Poly website (e.g., the CAED student blog). Look for this icon: 📶 (the WiFi-looking symbol). If you don't see it, copy the URL and paste it into your reader. Modern readers are smart enough to sniff out the feed.
Here is how to ditch the noise and reclaim your focus using RSS. The university website (calpoly.edu) is massive. The news section changes daily. Your major’s department page might post internship opportunities that vanish in 48 hours.
Let’s be real. Your inbox is chaos. Between the SLO City announcements, Professor Chang’s 11:59 p.m. Canvas notifications, and the 47 emails from the "Poly Escapes" listserv, actual important information gets buried faster than a freshman in the Deep End.
Plus, zero ads. Zero suggested reels. Just raw, useful data about your university. Don't go overboard. Subscribing to every club and committee feed will turn your RSS reader into a firehose. Start with 5 feeds. If you don't read them for a week, delete them. The Bottom Line Cal Poly is hard enough without fighting your own notification system. RSS turns the internet into a library instead of a casino.
But what if I told you there is a quieter, smarter way to stay informed about Cal Poly?
Go to a Cal Poly website (e.g., the CAED student blog). Look for this icon: 📶 (the WiFi-looking symbol). If you don't see it, copy the URL and paste it into your reader. Modern readers are smart enough to sniff out the feed.
Here is how to ditch the noise and reclaim your focus using RSS. The university website (calpoly.edu) is massive. The news section changes daily. Your major’s department page might post internship opportunities that vanish in 48 hours. cal poly rss
Let’s be real. Your inbox is chaos. Between the SLO City announcements, Professor Chang’s 11:59 p.m. Canvas notifications, and the 47 emails from the "Poly Escapes" listserv, actual important information gets buried faster than a freshman in the Deep End. Go to a Cal Poly website (e
Plus, zero ads. Zero suggested reels. Just raw, useful data about your university. Don't go overboard. Subscribing to every club and committee feed will turn your RSS reader into a firehose. Start with 5 feeds. If you don't read them for a week, delete them. The Bottom Line Cal Poly is hard enough without fighting your own notification system. RSS turns the internet into a library instead of a casino. Modern readers are smart enough to sniff out the feed
But what if I told you there is a quieter, smarter way to stay informed about Cal Poly?