Entries tagged with “xml” from O'Reilly Digital Media Blog
Christopher Penn from the Financial Aid Podcast has just released a tool to easily generate an iPhone-compatible page for your podcast. It is called the Financial Aid Podcast Podcaster iPhone Kit, and it is a free download.
What is a covenant anyway?
The U.S. government has been agressive in demanding that
other countries accede to noxious IPR innovations.
Does international law need to catch up
for when IPR owners want to give up these "rights"?
I wasn't there and I didn't see Sam Ruby, etc. Here is my fake report anyway.
One out of seven SAO projects have failed?
A nice background article on compression from Intel.
If you can diagnose this, I dub you a Hero of the XML Revolution. Hint: it is probably the most common problem for English-language XML documents.
A good C++ programming technique that has almost no published material available on the WWW relates to using the special pipeline instructions in modern CPUs for faster text processing. Here's example code using C++ intrinsic functions to give a fourfold speed increase for a UTF-8 to UTF-16 converter compared to the original C/C++ code.
'IE 7 will only accept well-formed XML in web feeds'
Where the real work gets done?
The first book on a new discipline?
I'm looking for a new job for the new year.
Here's a link to my resume, and the gripping
tale of why it is a good time for a fresh start
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.
Selections and comments from the recent W3C Schema Experience Workshop. I bet you won't be seeing Ads for XSD tools or systems with slogans "extremely disheartening", "difficult and sometimes impossible", and "trouble-shooting can get quite complicated"
Notes from the morning sessions at Gnomedex, in Seattle, WA.
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.
Keywords: May waffles and herring synthesize Greek love. Audition non-electronic big guns streaming passionate pipelines. Butterflies with pep. Staple material and flog.
About incompatible uses of XML Schema
OEAABDAAIITTWBFAHX!
Sports Illustrated poll suggests that Americans are more tolerant than many give them credit for
Docheads versus dataheads is obsolete:
the real distinction is between annotators and atomists
