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  • RSSAndAtomCompared . . . . 36 matches
         = RSS and Atom =
         most likely candidates will be [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss RSS 2.0] and [http://ietfreport.isoc.org/idref/draft-ietf-atompub-format/ Atom 1.0].
         The purpose of this page is to summarize, as clearly and simply as possible, the differences between the RSS 2.0 and Atom 1.0 syndication languages.
         Toru Marumoto has produced [http://www.witha.jp/Atom/RSS-and-Atom.html a Japanese translation].
         2005/07/21: RSS 2.0 is widely deployed and Atom 1.0 only by a few early adopters, see KnownAtomFeeds and KnownAtomConsumers.
         The RSS 2.0 specification is copyrighted by Harvard University and is frozen. No significant changes can be made and it is intended that future work be done under a different name; Atom is one example of such work.
         There are two popular protocols widely used with RSS, [http://www.xmlrpc.com/metaWeblogApi MetaWeblog]
         RSS 2.0 requires feed-level title, link, and description. RSS 2.0 does not require that any of the fields of individual items in a feed be present.
         RSS 2.0 may contain either plain text or escaped HTML, with no way to indicate which of the two is provided. Escaped HTML is ugly (for example, the string AT&T would be expressed as “AT&T”) and has been a source of difficulty for implementors. RSS 2.0 cannot contain actual well-formed XML markup, which reduces the re-usability of content.
          * escaped HTML, like is commonly used with RSS 2.0
         RSS 2.0 has a “description” element which is commonly used to contain either the full text of an entry or just a synopsis (sometimes in the same feed), and which sometimes is absent. There is no built-in way to signal whether the contents are complete.
         RSS
         The only recognized form of RSS 2.0 is an <rss> document.
         RSS 2.0 is not in an XML namespace but may contain elements from other XML namespaces. There is no central place where one can find out about many popular extensions, such as dc:creator and content:encoded.
         RSS 2.0 does not specify the handling of relative URI references, and in practice they cannot be used in RSS feeds.
         Both RSS 2.0 and Atom 1.0 feeds can be accessed via standard HTTP client libraries. Standard caching techniques work well and are encouraged. Template-driven creation of both formats is quite practical.
         Libraries for processing RSS 2.0:
         For identification of the language used in feeds, RSS 2.0 has its own <language> element, while Atom uses XML's built-in
         RSS 2.0 can be encrypted or signed like any other web content, if treated as a
         Alternatively, the feed can be encrypted or signed, like RSS 2.0, as a bag of bits.
  • RSS . . . . 32 matches
         = RSS? =
         The technology behind RSS allows you to subscribe to websites that have provided RSS feeds, these are typically sites that change or add content regularly. To use this technology you need to set up some type of aggregation service. Think of this aggregation service as your personal mailbox. You then have to subscribe to the sites that you want to get updates on. Unlike typical subscriptions to pulp-based newspapers and magazines, your RSS subscriptions are free, but they typically only give you a line or two of each article or post along with a link to the full article or post.
         The RSS formats provide web content or summaries of web content together with links to the full versions of the content, and other meta-data. This information is delivered as an XML file called RSS feed, webfeed, RSS stream, or RSS channel. In addition to facilitating syndication, RSS allows a website's frequent readers to track updates on the site using a news aggregator.
         Before RSS, several similar formats already existed for syndication, but none achieved widespread popularity or are still in common use today, and most were envisioned to work only with a single service. For example, in 1997 Microsoft created Channel Definition Format for the Active Channel feature of Internet Explorer 4.0. Another was created by Dave Winer of UserLand Software. He had designed his own XML syndication format for use on his Scripting News weblog, which was also introduced in 1997 [1].
         RDF Site Summary, the first version of RSS, was created by Dan Libby of Netscape in March 1999 for use on the My Netscape portal. This version became known as RSS 0.9. In July 1999 Netscape produced a prototype, tentatively named RSS 0.91, RSS standing for Rich Site Summary, this was a compromise with their customers who argued the complexity introduced (as XML namespaces) was unnecessary. This they considered a interim measure, with Libby suggesting an RSS 1.0-like format through the so-called Futures Document [2].
         Soon afterwards, Netscape lost interest in RSS, leaving the format without an owner, just as it was becoming widely used. A working group and mailing list, RSS-DEV, was set up by various users to continue its development. At the same time, Winer posted a modified version of the RSS 0.91 specification - it was already in use in their products. Since neither side had any official claim on the name or the format, arguments raged whenever either side claimed RSS as its own, creating what became known as the RSS fork. [3]
         The RSS-DEV group went on to produce RSS 1.0 in December 2000. Like RSS 0.9 (but not 0.91) this was based on the RDF specifications, but was more modular, with many of the terms coming from standard metadata vocabularies such as Dublin Core. Nineteen days later, Winer released RSS 0.92, a minor and (mostly) compatible revision of RSS 0.91. The next two years saw various minor revisions of the Userland branch of RSS, and its adoption by major media organizations, including The New York Times.
         Winer published RSS 2.0 in 2002, emphasizing "Really Simple Syndication" as the meaning of the three-letter abbreviation. RSS 2.0 remained largely compatible with RSS 0.92, and added the ability to add extension elements in their own namespaces. In 2003, Winer and Userland Software assigned ownership of the RSS 2.0 specification to his then workplace, Harvard's Berkman Center for the Internet & Society.
         [http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss RSS 2.0 Spec]
         [http://web.resource.org/rss/1.0/ RSS 1,0 Spec]
  • ExploringWorld . . . . 6 matches
         (V) 목표 1 : 서버 인수인계 하면서, 간단한 자유게시판에 대한 RSS 서비스 제공
         [http://zeropage.org/jsp/board/thin/rss.jsp 자유 게시판 RSS]
         [http://zeropage.org/jsp/board/thin/rss.jsp?table=multimedia 감상 게시판 RSS]
         [http://zeropage.org/jsp/board/thin/rss.jsp?table=T1002455826251 공지 게시판 RSS]
         [http://zeropage.org/jsp/board/thin/rss.jsp?table=qna 질답 게시판 RSS]
         [http://zeropage.org/jsp/board/thin/rss.jsp?table=ob1 OB 게시판 RSS]
  • RssMacro . . . . 6 matches
         [[RSS(http://chemie.skku.ac.kr/wiki/wiki.php/RecentChanges?action=rss_rc)]]
         [[RSS(http://chem.skku.ac.kr/~kle/moin/RecentChanges?action=rss_rc)]]
         [[RSS(http://kz.mpecc.com/moniwiki/wiki.php?action=rss_rc&dummy=1)]]
         [[RSS(http://chemie.skku.ac.kr/wiki/wiki.php/RecentChanges?action=rss_rc)]]
         [[RSS(http://wikix.org/ko/mymisc/rss?10)]]
         [[RSS(http://kldp.org/root/rdf.xml)]]
         [[Rss(http://chemie.skku.ac.kr/wiki/wiki.php/BlogChanges?action=blogrss&all=1)]]
  • PythonFeedParser . . . . 3 matches
         Python 용 RSS Parser Library. RSS 파싱하는데 단 한줄이면 가능.
         PHP 진영에서는? MagpieRSS 를 이용하면 될듯. http://magpierss.sourceforge.net/
  • WikiSandPage . . . . 3 matches
         RSS 리더
         [[RSS("http://zerowiki.dnip.net/zero/index.php?mode=getRSS&url=namsang",6)]]
  • Atom . . . . 2 matches
         Atom is an XML-based document format and HTTP-based protocol designed for the syndication of Web content such as weblogs and news headlines to Web sites as well as directly to user agents. It is based on experience gained in using the various versions of RSS. Atom was briefly known as "Pie" and then "Echo".
         [http://www.intertwingly.net/wiki/pie/Rss20AndAtom10Compared RSSAtomCompare]
  • MoniWikiPlugins . . . . 2 matches
          * rss_rc
          * blogrss == rss_blog
          * rss_blog (RSS 2.0)
          * rdf_blog (RSS 0.91)
          * rss :rss reader
  • Struts . . . . 2 matches
          [[PageList(제목단어)]] [[ISBN(ISBN 숫자,KR]] [[RSS(RSS주소,5)]] Wiki는 빨리 라는 뜻이다.
  • eXtensibleMarkupLanguage . . . . 2 matches
         The Extensible Markup Language (XML) is a W3C-recommended general-purpose markup language for creating special-purpose markup languages, capable of describing many different kinds of data. In other words XML is a way of describing data and an XML file can contain the data too, as in a database. It is a simplified subset of Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML). Its primary purpose is to facilitate the sharing of data across different systems, particularly systems connected via the Internet. Languages based on XML (for example, Geography Markup Language (GML), RDF/XML, RSS, Atom, MathML, XHTML, SVG, and MusicXML) are defined in a formal way, allowing programs to modify and validate documents in these languages without prior knowledge of their form.
          * 최근의 많은 Syndication 포맷이 XML에 기반을 두고 있다. (RSS, ATOM, OPML, Attention, Userlist etc) - [eternalbleu]
  • 시작 . . . . 2 matches
         }}} [[ISBN(ISBN 숫자,KR]] [[FullSearch(내용단어)]] [[PageList(제목단어)]] [[RSS(RSS주소,5)]] [[LinkCount(페이지제목)]]
  • BlogLines . . . . 1 match
         웹용 [RSSAggregator]
  • ExploringWorld/20040308-시간여행 . . . . 1 match
         1. 자유게시판 게시물 n개를 RSS 출력
  • HelpOnActions . . . . 1 match
          * `rss_rc`: RecentChanges를 RSS로 보여주는 액션.
  • Linux/필수명령어/용법 . . . . 1 match
         - RSS : 프로세서에 의해 사용되는 실제 메모리의 용량(K byte 단위)
  • OutlineProcessorMarkupLanguage . . . . 1 match
         현재 RSS 리더에서 피드를 공유하는 목적으로 주로 이용되는 포맷으로, Radio UserLand 의 DaveWiner 가 개발했다.
         그 활용가능성을 인정받아 현재는 rss에서 피드를 공유하는 것과 같은 곳에서 이용되고 있다.
  • ProjectPrometheus/Journey . . . . 1 match
         일단 알고리즘부분을 대강 생각한뒤 Python 으로 TDD 를 했다. ([http://zeropage.org/browsecvs/index.php?&dir=ProjectPrometheus%2FPythonProject%2F&file=RSSpike.py&rev=1.1&cvsrep=ZeroPage 소스]). CRC 세션을 먼저하여 시나리오를 시각화해두고 프로그래밍을 했었다면 좀 더 빨리 작성할 수 있지 않았을까 하는 생각을 해본다.
  • Technorati . . . . 1 match
         RSS와 블로그의 폭발적인 사용에 힘입어 급속성장하고 있는 기업중에 하나. 기존 포탈의 top-down 방식의 정보 제공이 아니라 개별의 요소들을 종합해서 정보를 만들어내는 bottom-up 방식으로 가공된 정보를 제공하는 사이트.
  • ZPHomePage/20041228 . . . . 1 match
          * RSS로 게시판내용 출력
  • ZPHomePage/계획 . . . . 1 match
          * RSS로 게시판내용 출력
  • 데블스캠프2010/넷째날/후기 . . . . 1 match
          * RSS리더기와 퀵소트에대해서 배워봤습니다. 또한 생각하는 개발자에대해서 설명해주셧습니다. 여러가지로 생각해본점이 많았던 강의 였습니다. 또한 리더가되었을때의 그 초조감은 정말 진땀났습니다;; 하지만 좋은 프로그래머의 기준을 잘 알려주신것은 정말 좋았습니다. - [양아석]
  • 송지원 . . . . 1 match
          * RSS, blogAPI 세미나 - 시방 노딩중 하다가 흐지부지 됨
  • 제로페이지자유게시판 . . . . 1 match
          [[RSS(http://zb.zeropage.org/xml.php?sid=19,10)]]
  • 졸업논문/서론 . . . . 1 match
         이 가운데 경량 프로그래밍 모델을 적용한 웹 기술이 계속 발전해가고 있다. 웹2.0 사이트는 Adobe Flash/Flex, CSS, 의미를 지닌 XHTML markup과 Microformats의 사용, RSS/Atom를 사용한 데이터 수집, 정확하고 의미있는 URLs, 블로그 출판들 같은 전형적인 기술을 포함한다.[2]
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