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There are 35 articles & tutorials regarding "RSS".

1.) RSS Utilities: A Tutorial
By Rodrigo Oliveira August 2003 RSS ("Really Simple Syndication") is a web content syndication format. RSS is becoming the standard format for syndicating news content over the web. As part of my recent contract with Sun Microsystems, I was tasked with the development of a JSP Tag Library to be used by anybody with a basic understanding of RSS, JavaServer Pages, and HTML. The taglib is mostly geared towards non-technical editors of web sites that use RSS for aggregating news content. My...
Found at Java Developer Connection

2.) RSS on the Client
by John E. Simpson April 30, 2003 What do I do with an RSS feed? Q: I am trying to figure out this RSS thing. If I want to "subscribe" to someone's XML feed, what do I do? I hit the XML button and get an entire page of code. What do I do with that? A: I'll start by spelling out something which you probably (at some level) already know: RSS (an acronym for RDF Site Summary) is just another XML vocabulary. An RSS feed -- as you call it, an XML feed -- is simply an XML document conforming...
Found at XML.com

3.) Term of the Week: RSS
By Jim Minatel RSS (Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication) began as a way to summarize major news web site articles into headlines and updates that other sites could use easily. While that original mission is still a major component of RSS use, RSS has exploded with the growth of blogs and other frequently updated items as a way to keep up with what's new. RSS is based in XML. The current official specification is 2.0 but several other versions including 0.91 and 1.0 are still...
Found at developer.com

4.) Raising the Bar on RSS Feed Quality
by Timothy Appnel 11/19/2002 RSS is an XML-based syntax for facilitating the exchange of information in a lightweight fashion through the distribution (or feeding ) of resources. Publishers can use this versatile and increasingly essential format to assist end users in tracking and consuming content. Netscape originally developed the format but lost interest and eventually abandoned work on it. This created an identity crisis that devolved into varying interruptions, with dispute over...
Found at O'Reilly Network

5.) Raising the Bar on RSS Feed Quality
by Timothy Appnel November 19, 2002 RSS is an XML-based syntax for facilitating the exchange of information in a lightweight fashion through the distribution (or feeding ) of resources. Publishers can use this versatile and increasingly essential format to assist end users in tracking and consuming content. Netscape originally developed the format but lost interest and eventually abandoned work on it. This created an identity crisis that devolved into varying interruptions, with dispute...
Found at XML.com

6.) Why Choose RSS 1.0?
by Tony Hammond July 23, 2003 Creating New Applications through Extensibility RSS, a set of lightweight XML syndication technologies primarily used for relaying news headlines, has been adapted to a wide range of uses from sending out web site descriptions to disseminating blogs. This article looks at a new application area for RSS: syndicating tables of contents for serials publications. Serials newsfeeds -- especially scientific newsfeeds -- differ from regular newsfeeds in that a key...
Found at XML.com

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