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    RSS Listings
    Total:  28Displaying: 11 - 20Pages: << 1 2 3 >>

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    A Weblog API For the Grassroots
    Last month I looked at the Necho message format. I compared it to RSS, its predecessor. In this column, I want to look at its API. Joe Gregorio is the main author of the API, written in the IETF RFC format. Joe is using Marshall Rose's xml2rfc package, so various formats are available . Make sure to pick up the latest version; as of the time of this writing, draft 6 was the most current one.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Normalizing Syndicated Feed Content
    you want to write a program to read RSS and Atom syndicated feeds. Sounds simple enough. After all, RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication" (or "Rich Site Summary", or "RDF Site Summary", or something), and Atom is just RSS with different tag names, right? Well, not exactly. First, you need to realize that there are multiple versions of RSS. I wrote about this a year and a half ago in my inaugural Dive Into XML article , and the problem has gotten.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Web Services From the Grassroots
    This month we'll take a look at the project -- the working name is "Necho" but has been "Echo" and "Pie" at various times. We'll use it to motivate a look at tradeoffs in XML and web services design. "Syndication" is the term used when a site makes an RSS ("Really Simple Syndication") document available at a URL.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Building a Semantic Web Site
    Bring Metadata Back to RSS Got comments or questions on this technique? Ask the author and share your views in our forum. Post your comments Even though the Semantic Web may yet seem a remote dream, there are already tools one can use to make a tiny step forward by building "semantic web sites," which can be much easier to navigate than ordinary sites. In this article, I will discuss how RSS 1.0 and its taxonomy module can be used as a central format.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Processing RSS
    welcome to the first installment of a new regular column on XML.com, Practical XQuery. Ivelin Ivanov and Per Bothner will be bringing us tips on the use of the XQuery language, as well as self-contained example applications. The goal of this article is to demonstrate the use of XQuery to accomplish a routine, yet interesting task; in particular, to render an HTML page that merges RSS news feeds from two different weblogs.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Build an RSS Generator Component
    VB.NET, XML You have undoubtedly tried numerous ways to distribute corporate information, including paper reports, Web reports, custom data reporting, and third-party data-analysis apps all with varying degrees of success. The problem is that report users need to look in their mail slot, visit a Web page, or go elsewhere for your output. Instead, try Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds, a data-publishing technique based on the XML standard.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Extending RSS
    The boom of weblogs has boosted interest in techniques for syndicating news-like material. In response a family of applications, known as aggregators or newsreaders, have been developed. Aggregators or newsreaders consume and display metadata feeds derived from the content. Currently there are two major formats for these data feeds: RSS 1.0 and RSS 2.0.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Creating a Generic Site-To-Rss Tool - Introduction
    I'll show how to use regular expressions to parse a Web page's HTML text into manageable chunks of data. That data will be converted and written as an RSS feed for the whole world to consume. Finally, I'll show how to create a generic tool that enables you to automatically generate an RSS feed from any website, given a small group of parameters.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Revamping the RSS Bandit Application
    This article was previously published on MSDN Magazine . Summary: Dare Obasanjo revisits his RSS Bandit project, a C# application that retrieves and displays news feeds from various Web sites, and improves it using various XML features of the .NET Framework to build a rich .NET client application. (16 printed pages) Download the RSSBandit Installer.msi sample file.

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    Making Feature-Rich, Movable Type RSS Files
    The curse of metadata, once you get over the intractable issues of trust and standards and categorization, is that you never know how much to give. For the weblogging community, which produces masses of metadata, mostly without knowing it, this is especially true: we could be giving out so much more for others to play with, and with very little effort. Take the default RSS 1.0 template within Movable Type .

    Updated: 04/22/2005

    RSS Listings
    Total:  28Displaying: 11 - 20Pages: << 1 2 3 >>



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