Using Really Simple Syndication (RSS) to enhance student research
ACM SIGITE Newsletter
A comparison of feature selection methods for an evolving RSS feed corpus
Information Processing and Management: an International Journal - Special issue: Informetrics
Identifying and characterizing public science-related fears from RSS feeds: Research Articles
Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
A practical method for browsing a relational database using a standard search engine
Integrated Computer-Aided Engineering - Selected papers from the IEEE Conference on Information Reuse and Integration (IRI), July 13-15, 2008
Corporator: a tool for creating RSS-based specialized corpora
WAC '06 Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Web as Corpus
A platform for syndicating and manipulating instrumentation and measurement data on the web
VECIMS'09 Proceedings of the 2009 IEEE international conference on Virtual Environments, Human-Computer Interfaces and Measurement Systems
Technological foundations of the current blogosphere
Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Web Intelligence, Mining and Semantics
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Perhaps the most explosive technological trend over the past two years has been blogging. As a matter of fact, it's been reported that the number of blogs during that time has grown from 100,000 to 4.8 million-with no end to this growth in sight. What's the technology that makes blogging tick? The answer is RSS--a format that allows bloggers to offer XML-based feeds of their content. It's also the same technology that's incorporated into the websites of media outlets so they can offer material (headlines, links, articles, etc.) syndicated by other sites. As the main technology behind this rapidly growing field of content syndication, RSS is constantly evolving to keep pace with worldwide demand. That's where Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom steps in. It provides bloggers, web developers, and programmers with a thorough explanation of syndication in general and the most popular technologies used to develop feeds. This book not only highlights all the new features of RSS 2.0-the most recent RSS specification-but also offers complete coverage of its close second in the XML-feed arena, Atom. The book has been exhaustively revised to explain: metadata interpretation the different forms of content syndication the increasing use of web services how to use popular RSS news aggregators on the market After an introduction that examines Internet content syndication in general (its purpose, limitations, and traditions), this step-by-step guide tackles various RSS and Atom vocabularies, as well as techniques for applying syndication to problems beyond news feeds. Most importantly, it gives you a firm handle on how to create your own feeds, and consume or combine other feeds. If you're interested in producing your own content feed, Developing Feeds with RSS and Atom is the one book you'll want in hand.