If you're looking at this then you are either:
a) Searching tribe.net for an achingly handsome gentleman who's great in the sack, or:
b) Visiting because of you caught Tribe's "Tribe 25" marketing blitz and figured you'd see if the new features would help in your search for an achingly handsome gentleman who's great in the sack.
I was nominated as an 'interesting tribe member' by somebody who was probably drunk at the time and invited to play with the new features. So I did. Though I'm not being paid or anything (notoriety doesn't pay particularly well, apparently), I decided to return the favor by pointing out some cool uses for the new RSS modules.
1) SFist, of course, has a number of RSS flavors to choose from, and they all seem to be supported by Tribe. So if your blog feed is Atom or RDF or XML or whatevs, you can plop it right here (or I could start my own blog on my Tribe profile, but cut me some slack, I'm only one man).
2) Want to feed your Flickr photos to a module on your profile?* Then give them a unique tag (like 'jacksonsawesomephotosofstuff') and add the following to the RSS URL field for your new RSS module.
3) Share your bookmarks via del.icio.us, either by using the del.icio.us links module or by, you guessed it, using RSS (sensing a theme, here?). The former is a bit easier, because you can just put your del.icio.us username in the field. But the latter is good if you want links tagged with something you find interesting, or by someone else.
4) David Sifry admitted that he started Technorati "because I wanted to know what people were saying about me online." And that's the kind of vain sentiment that I'm totally down with. So set up a Technorati watchlist for a search term, and you'll have a handy RSS feed for any posts in the blogosphere that reference that term.
5) I try to stay on top of city events for SFist, which means that I'm totally addicted to Upcoming.org, the SquidList, Fecal Face, SF Station and, of course, Tribe. Upcoming.org in particular allows you to create a feed of your own chosen events, so that your friends will know where to find you when out on the town.
Now, pretty much anyone can get up-to-date with you whenever they want without interfering with your busy schedule of searching for achingly handsome gentlemen who are great in the sack. Any other coolio things folks are doing with their new Tribe profiles, with or without RSS? Let me know!
*Thanks to Wade for the tip on that one.