Did the NBER create an RSS feed for abstracts of new working papers?
http://www.nber.org/rss/new.xml
I didn’t notice this feature at the nber site, but my Google reader suggested it to me.
Did the NBER create an RSS feed for abstracts of new working papers?
http://www.nber.org/rss/new.xml
I didn’t notice this feature at the nber site, but my Google reader suggested it to me.
May 29 2009
A commenter recommended Daniel Nettle's book on Personality. It was a good recommendation. Various lines of evidence suggest that our interest in money--and the material goods it buys--is mainly as a marker of comparative social status. Some more notes and excerpts follow.For me, the most troubling thing about pers...
May 29 2009
Here's a great passage from the noble Mankiw:A moral and political philosophy is not like a smorgasbord, where you get to pick and choose the offerings you like and leave the others behind without explanation. It is more like your mother telling you to clean everything on your plate. If you are a Utilitarian redistribu...
May 28 2009
Did the NBER create an RSS feed for abstracts of new working papers? http://www.nber.org/rss/new.xml I didn't notice this feature at the nber site, but my Google reader suggested it to me.
READER COMMENTS
david
May 28 2009 at 7:51pm
No idea either, but there are feeds for individual NBER programs.
And the link to the feed for all new working papers isn’t on the page itself, naturally: you have to view the page’s metadata or look in your browser’s detected list of such feeds.
It’s rather odd, really. Perhaps it’s a work-in-progress and Google’s spider just picked it up early.
Erick
May 29 2009 at 2:30am
Sounds like an answer to “You might be an econ geek if…”
Zac Gochenour
May 29 2009 at 10:39am
Many thanks, Arnold! Very cool.
new.xml seems to be an aggregate of all the individual feeds
The feeds aren’t new, but as david suggests appear to be a work in progress, as they aren’t advertised and only recently are a lot of papers added.
Comments are closed.