Entries tagged with “rss” from O'Reilly Digital Media Blog
Libsyn Pro allows podcasters to administer multiple RSS channels. The company says it's a perfect launch pad for professional podcasters who produce podcasts for more than one client, since the RSS channels can be delegated. Stats can be rolled into channel groupings, making it easy to generate monthly reports for multiple podcasts. This is something that advertising agencies and commercial sponsors appreciate.
My recent cover story for Electronic Musician magazine, "The Art of Podcasting," is now online for free. Apple was pretty tight-lipped when I was writing it, though, which made me wonder: What podcasting surprises does the company have up its sleeve?
Related link: http://jade.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/feed/index.php Back when I worked at a big L.A. recording studio, I fell into a strange pattern where I’d get off my 12-hour shift, drive home, and then read audio magazines before falling asleep. (I also got a number of parking tickets, because I often couldn’t remember what day of the week it was, running me afoul of...
'IE 7 will only accept well-formed XML in web feeds'
Related link: http://www.spacemusic.nl When is a button not a button? When I click on the RSS button above this article,* Firefox asks me where I want to download a file called “ ” (there’s just a blank space). Safari just redisplays the article teaser. The and buttons on other sites (which look even more like physical buttons) bring up the whole...
This post attempts to put some meat on that overloaded term, "Web 2.0." It does this by defining the atmosphere that Web 2.0 applications operate within and making (hopefully) clear assertions about what the moving parts are, as well as the core attributes of those parts. The goal is to give the reader some "kindling wood" for thinking about creating their own composite application services around this emerging model.
RSS began its life as a really simple way for content providers to syndicate their content and for content consumers to subscribe to their favorite providers. When the blogosphere emerged, RSS really took off. Now, just as its “simple” technology cousin, HTML, provided the underpinnings of the Web 1.0 technology platform, RSS is emerging as a platform for delivering the broadband and mobile ready applications of a Web 2.0 enabled world. Backed by two application examples, this blog presents a thesis of the key moving parts integral to the RSS platform and how they come together.
An update from Gnomedex, day two: Mind Maps, Julie Leung & personal blogging, and tomorrow's RSS
Notes from the morning sessions at Gnomedex, in Seattle, WA.
Dean Hachamovitch, GM of Microsoft's Internet Explorer team is here to tell us that Microsoft gets RSS, and gets it big. So big they want it to permeate Longhorn.
Gnomedex 5.0 kicks off in Seattle this morning (June 24) at the Bell Harbor Conference Center. The topics being blogged about include Blogging (self-referential and otherwise), RSS, Podcasting, etc.
CornerScreen Networks leverages the emergence of three trends -- user-defined RSS feeds, enhanced tools for organizing online content and Google-style advertising networks -- and unifies them within a slide viewer application that runs in a corner of your computer screen.
A new mailing list for practical conversations about syndication of audio and video. A place for publishers and consumers to coordinate. RSS 2.0 enclosures are central. RSS and Atom are directly relevant. Playlists may be relevant.
Mark Pilgrim makes the perplexing claim that XML has failed because its developers "missed it" on the encoding issue. As one of them, I disagree.
"XML and Web services are crucial for protecting America" Using RSS and E-Ink for general Class 4 IETMs
With 40% of the online population now having always-on, broadband connections, new types of tools are needed for consumers to better manage the online information that flows through such connections. This blog discusses the attributes of one such tool, which I call an inter-personal information manager, or iPim for short.
GeoURL is a location-to-URL reverse directory. This will allow you to find URLs by their proximity to a given location. Find your neighbor's blog, perhaps, or the web page of the restaurants near you.
People are using RSS more and more to guide them to interesting HTML pages. Because readers are changing the way they relate to websites, website owners need to change they way they relate to their readers. Find out how one website, Artima.com, has attempted to catch and ride the RSS wave. And if you have a weblog, find out how you can "Join the Buzz."
nice article from econtent about RSS (maybe because they quoted Rael?)...
