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Content Syndication With RSS
from the feed-to-the-world dept.
| Content Syndication With RSS | |
| author | Ben Hammersley |
| pages | 222 |
| publisher | O'Reilly |
| rating | 8/10 |
| reviewer | Alex Moskalyuk |
| ISBN | 0596003838 |
| summary | Introduction and guide for RSS implementations |
The first three chapters are primarily discussing the multiplicity of RSS standards. While with some other technologies it might seem a bit excessive, remember that RSS is a forked project with the forks at this moment bearing little resemblance to one another. The abbreviations even have different abbreviations - RSS means Really Simple Syndication if you are using RSS 0.91 or RSS 0.92, that was developed by Dave Winer. RSS means RDF Site Summary if the version you're using RSS 1.0. The development credits in this case go to RSS DEV team. To confuse you even more, the RSS 2.0 standard is deciphered as... correct, Really Simple Syndication again.
Hence chapter 4 discusses Winer's implementation (simplistic and user-friendly), while chapter 6 focuses on RSS 1.0 (RDF-compliant and data-architect-friendly), and chapter 8 talks about RSS 2.0 (improved RSS 0.9x). Chapter 4 is available online as a PDF file. Section 4.4 is recommended for those interested in promoting their RSS feeds as it provides pretty good reference to meta data.
Chapter 9 is perhaps of special interest to Web developers and administrators out there. It presents several code samples to properly parse RSS and present the result in readable HTML. The examples include (a) parsing with XML::Simple in Perl, (b) parsing with Perl regular expressions, (c) parsing with XML::Simple and sending the headlines to cell phones via WWW::SMS, (d) parsing via XSLT transformation. Python, PHP and ASP folks might feel left out due to the abundance of Perl examples, but if you got so far in the book, you can probably apply the regular expressions example or search for appropriate support for RSS format in your preferred language.
Going beyond the standard itself, RSS directories, aggregators and readers are discussed. Author makes a distinction between the last two by classifying Meerkat-like services into aggregators and desktop or Web applications designed to present the information to the user into readers. The chapter also provides information about Syndic8, its API, and describes the feed registration process. OReilly's Meerkat is also discussed in chapter, together with reference table for its API (you can make Meerkat generate HTML or RSS news headlines on certain topic or using certain keywords by providing a right query to its Web interface).
The book is quite a smooth read for a text describing the details of data specification. The chapters are informative and the book is not overloaded with useless information just to increase the page count. The tips are quite useful for someone, who is knew to the field and answers some questions not covered by standards (e.g., how often should you request an RSS feed, what to do if you're being screen-scraped, etc.)
I like the way the author divided the chapters into RSS 0.9x/2.0 and RSS 1.0 and kept two worlds apart. Most of the time you probably won't be interested in developing a feed to support both standards, but would like to focus just on one. The examples in Perl are perfect with me, although for someone new to Perl or programming in general those examples with abundant regular expressions might look a bit convoluted. Kudos to the author for not expanding on the topic, like many do, and providing an example of a script for RSS manipulation in every possible language out there.
What's missing? I wish more pages were dedicated to desktop RSS readers. FeedReader, HotSheet, Syndirella, Beaver and SharpReader are excellent end user applications currently gaining some popularity among those who'd prefer to browse the favorite headlines at a glance, instead of going to a dozen of sites every morning. To be fair, there's a huge list of readers in Appendix, and some applications mentioned above only came around in the last few months, which was probably after the book hit the press. Some sites also didn't make it into the book. I like DailyRotation and FreshNews that borrow from Meerkat's versatility and provide their own feed portal.
Overall, the book is a pretty good developer's guide to RSS standard. Accompanied with helpful illustrations and numerous tips it's an excellent resource for those unfamiliar with RSS and a helpful reference for those who have been doing Web syndication for a while.
You can purchase Content Syndication With RSS from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Having used RSS for a while now... (Score:4, Insightful)
Not sure about the book, but RSS is something (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.webcalc.net/)
I think the ability to easily transfer information in real time is just going to grow with time, this is not a fast fad.
Go calculate [webcalc.net] something!
/. Feed (Score:4, Interesting)
Meta-Slashdot! (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot
http://slashdot.org/
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en-us
Copyright 1997-2001, OSDN
2003-04-21T16:33:48+00:00
OSDN
pater@slas
Technology
hourly
1
1970-01-01T00:00+
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In 72 Hours, Your Ban Will Be Lifted
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Do Not Bother Contacting Us For 72 Hours
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So apparently we've not only succeeded in slashdotting Slashdot, we've gotten Slashdot to give us multiple duplicate posts! WE WIN!
Re:Meta-Slashdot! (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://joskunst.net/)
Yes, RSS reader banning on /. is a bit extreme. Just trying to find the correct URLs to use got me banned for 72 hours.
JP
Revenue model for Semantic Web? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.anotherbear.com/ | Last Journal: Tuesday November 25 2003, @03:29PM)
How are sites that offer a Semantic Web interface such as RSS supposed to bring in revenue? They can't rely on advertising because the machines that browse the Semantic Web cannot be trusted to deliver advertising to a human eyeball.
Easy (Score:4, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Saturday November 09 2002, @11:58PM)
In
The key is putting limited information, so you can draw the user to the site if you're trying to generate revenu from your content. Then, you better hope the internal link referenced in the feed has some advertising.
List of RSS feeds? (Score:2, Interesting)
Making an RSS feed is easy - I want to have RSS feeds of other more interesting sites avaiable to put in my own web pages. And that would benefit everyone, no?
Diarist.com and passworded RSS Feeds (Score:5, Informative)
(http://computingnews.com/ | Last Journal: Friday March 21 2003, @03:43PM)
Diarist.com offers a HTTP Password protected RSS feed here. http://rsstest.diarist.com/
As I write this... There are only two RSS clients which can read it's passworded feeds.
1. NewsGator
2. A beta version of FeedReader
Web Based Aggregator (Score:2)
(http://www.bengarvey.com/)
Check it out. [bengarvey.com]
(You need to register to edit the feeds you want to subscribe to)
I can't help but do a little astro trufing.... (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.jmagar.com/)
Cheers,
Mike
Full RSS support scheduled for KDE 3.2 (Score:2, Informative)
(http://mcamen.de/)
This will include a RSS dcop service providing a powerful XML-RPC interface to www.syndic8.com, a new RSS konqueror sidebar and a rewritten knewsticker.
Currently everything is still under development but already quite useful (if you know how to deal with dcop...). Let's hope we will have everything finished before KDE 3.2.
Livejournal now supports RSS (Score:2)
(http://andrewducker.livejournal.com/)
www.livejournal.com/users/andrewducker/rss
but they syndicate over 1000 feeds in return. For instance you can add Slashdot to your friends list by adding user "Slashdot" or going to:
http://www.livejournal.com/users/slashdot/
I now read nearly all my news through syndication - you can see my total news feed at http://andrewducker.livejournal.com/friends/news
Syndication has my news gathering a whole lot easier.
Slashdot's Palm page (Score:1)
RSS Reader? (Score:1)
another news RSS reader site (Score:1)
(http://phphtmllib.newsblob.com/)
Cheesegrater + Portalizer (Score:1)
(http://www.bytebot.net/ | Last Journal: Thursday February 12 2004, @06:12AM)
Kind of useful, written entirely in Perl, and I've tried it on a Linux box with no problems. Not sure if it'll work with other OSes, but its worth a shot.
Go grab the two perl scripts and the cron job if need be.
How is this a troll? (Score:1)
(Last Journal: Saturday March 08 2003, @03:00PM)
Re:Cheaper (Score:1)
(http://francis.uy.googlepages.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday August 29, @09:40AM)
And it's even cheaper if you buy it here [addall.com], plus the advantages of not supporting companies that abuse the patent system, and not giving a commission to users who post self-serving adverts on slashdot.