Version: Unbekannt (using 4.3.1 (KDE 4.3.1) "release 3", openSUSE Factory) Compiler: gcc OS: Linux (x86_64) release 2.6.31-rc9-7-default It would be nice if the standard rss-reader could be selected as standard-component like a web-browser or email application. At the moment I have to set akregator as standard application to open *.rss files which should for the future be preconfigured that way. I would suggest the std-entry for *.rss to be kept in sync with the selection as standard-component.
Does editing the preferred application for filetype ".rss" help? You can configure filetypes with System Settings->Advanced->File Associations. File type for rss is "application/rss+xml".
Hmm, I know that from KDE3 but can no more find it in the system settings of KDE4. Unfortunately setting the default application to open *.rss (by right click on an rss) does not always help when browsing the web. KDE4-konqueror still opens my rss at http://www.elstel.com as plain text although my link specifies the mime type of the target: <a rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" href="http://mirror.elstel.com/elstel.rss" title="elstel - site updates" > (May be because the server returns the wrong mime type in the HTTP-response, but this is something I can not change. Anyway the type field in a_href should override the mime type of the target!) Besides the possibility to change the file association for *.rss the default rss reader should be more easily selectable as standard component like email or instant messenger. (In a fact this are now three different issues; you may ask me to open separate reports for them; this one is mainly about adding the rss-reader as standard-component; others: interprete target-attr of <a href>, add changing file assoc. to system settings.)
> Does editing the preferred application for filetype ".rss" help? No, in a fact it does not. This is another bug. Even rss-es of professional sites as http://www.regenwald.org/RSS/rdr_aktionen_de.xml are opened as text/plain though their server returns the correct mime-type in the HTTP-header.