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28 | Displaying: 1 - 10 | Pages: 1 2 3 >> |
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Ah, the joys of RSS. You can get the data you need, as soon as it\'s available, and no nagging browsers or pop-ups along the way. If only all sites had RSS feeds. If there\'s one thing that would be really nice, it would be the ability to generate an RSS feed from any site I want. For example, .netWire is a very interesting site with lots of useful information. However, the folks maintaining this site hadn't thought about providing it with an RSS feed, which it so sorely needs.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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A persistent criticism of open source software is that it is more about copying existing features than creating new ones. While this criticism is overblown, the literature of open source is clearer on debugging than on design. This note concerns an attempt to apply debugging techniques to feature requests and concludes by describing Ben Hammersley\'s attempt to create such a system, implemented as an RSS feed.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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The developer content you need is now where you need it, when you need it: on your desktop. Thats the benefit of Sun's free, Developer Content Syndication Program, offering up-to-date headline feeds for such developer content as articles, latest downloads, tutorials, and code samples. The popularity of RSS feeds seems to be taking off, especially in the developer community. Developers who are too busy to view all the latest news and articles from throughout the web are getting this content delivered to their desktop.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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Just as the open source movement has changed attitudes about software and software vendors, so phenomena like RSS may be changing attitudes about the creation and maintenance of industry standards. For example, the News Standards Summit took place in Philadelphia on 8 December 2003, immediately before the XML 2003 conference. It featured a number of interesting presentations on the apparently overlapping, or competing, XML based standards in what we might call the formal news industry, as well as those used in what we will call, by way of contrast, the informal news industry - i.e. developers and users of RSS and Atom.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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In the inaugural article of my new XML.com column, Hacking the Library (RSS feed, Atom feed), I offered a short tour of the territory I intend to explore with you, dear reader. It's a territory I call "dijalog", which stands for the confluence and intertwingling of the digital and the analog. If you're like me, you will never live the pure, weightless all-digital media lifestyle. Our media collections weren't born digital.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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Clearly this URL-composition idiom is rooted in the classic Unix pipeline. The composite URL says: pipe the referenced XML data through the referenced filter using the referenced transformation rules. The references, though, are global. Each is a URL in its own right, one that may be cited in an email message, blogged to a Web page, indexed by Google, and used to form other composite URLs. This arrangement has all sorts of interesting ramifications.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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In this article, I provide an overview of RSS\'s core syntax, then I examine the poor state of RSS feed quality and provide some recommendations for authoring more useful and effective feeds. This examination is not a review of the RSS specification, nor is it an emphatic plea for strict compliance. Instead, this article provides an approach to authoring RSS feeds that is neutral, practical, and conservative. RSS feeds are simply too useful a mechanism for information exchange services. It is imperative that we improve their effectiveness.
Updated: 05/07/2005
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An XML vocabulary should be designed in such a way that the applications that process it do not break when it is inevitably changed. One of the primary benefits of using XML for building data interchange formats is that the APIs and technologies for processing XML are quite resilient when faced with additions to vocabularies. If I write an application that loads RSS feeds looking for item elements, then processes their link and title elements using any one.
Updated: 04/22/2005
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We are ready for any unforeseen event that may or may not occur." -- Dan Quayle Visual Studio.NET 2005 BETA 1 was released to the MSDN Subscriber community on July 1, 2004. Here are some of the latest quirks, topics and information I have discovered. This article will be updated on a regular basis as new items become known, and will appear in our RSS Feed , so check back frequently! Installation Issues:
Updated: 04/22/2005
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What Is Web Syndication? Web site syndication has gotten more popular as sites reference each other not only by a single hyperlink but also by embedding content. The idea was pioneered by Netscape's Rich Site Summary (RSS) XML format. RSS was developed in early 1999 to populate Netscape's My Netscape portal with external newsfeeds ("channels"). Since then RSS has taken on a life of its own and now thousands of sites use it as a "what's new" mechanism.
Updated: 04/22/2005
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RSS Listings
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Total:
28 | Displaying: 1 - 10 | Pages: 1 2 3 >> |
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