If you add:
<link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="RSS" href="/my_rss.rss">
to your page, Firefox can detect that and add an RSS feed to your bookmarks. A little orange icon appears in the lower right hand corner of the browser window and if you click on it, you can add the feed to your bookmarks. Now that I'm using Firefox more and more, I'm trying to learn how to, as a web developer, leverage some of its features. That way I won't feel so bad as Firefox continues to gain market share (I heard that it just hit 10%) and the inevitable double-publishing starts again.
In my last post, I made some mixed comments about Firefox and I got a number of emails, a very small number of which were almost readable, that appeared to say that hating on the pinnacle of humanity was akin to touching children. If I get more, my next post will be entitled "Firefox is the browser Pol Pot would have used," even though I use Firefox almost exclusively. Firefox has some very good features (tabbed browsing being the possibly the best thing since web browsers started -- and YES, I know that Opera had it first, and this RSS thing has the potential to be very cool as I learn more about it) and some very bad features (it takes up a near blasphemous amount of virtual memory if you use it for longer than the average lifespan of a Mr Softee ice cream cone in July, and waiting for it to process a lot of Javascript is like watching ketsup come out of the bottle). But let me repeat ... I like Firefox. I recommend it to my friends. I use it. Probably more than you. I'll take the bad with the good, as I'm sure that both are going to get better over time.