This is a free software project to let people create printable PDFs from content found on the web. It is a free alternative to HP's Tabbloid service. It is being developed as part of the Five Filters project to promote alternative, non-corporate media.
As a blogger, I am a content creator. I don't want my content stolen, or reposted without attribution or under somebody else's name. But I am also a huge advocate of RSS and continuing to adapt where the conversation is being held
Google FeedServer is an open-source Atom Publishing provider based on the Abdera Framework. Google FeedServer has chosen to implement simple backend data adapters that allow the developer to quickly deploy a feed for an existing data source such as a db
The list of financial firms deploying Web 2.0 applications, both within the enterprise and externally, is growing. TD Ameritrade, Bear Stearns and Wells Fargo all have announced new 2.0 applications in the last few months.
In this article John Ferguson Smart shows you how to use the Rome API to read and process RSS feeds in any format. You'll also learn how to set up an RSS feed to deliver build reports in a continuous integration environment, using Continuum as your CI ser
This morning we added a new class to the Google AJAX Feed API designed to allow you to more easily add a collection of feeds to your pages. The FeedControl is pretty simple:
Yahoo!'s new Pipes service is a service that generalizes the idea of the mashup, providing a drag and drop editor that allows you to connect internet data sources, process them, and redirect the output. It has enormous promise in turning the web into a p
Yahoo! Pipes is one of a very small set of on-line data manipulation and data mashup environments that can really change the way we work with on-line data sources.
I’ve just watched Mårten Mickos from MySQL give a 10 minute talk [at the Web 2.0 Summit] on what he terms the “Great Database in the Sky†almost exactly describing the our community’s vision of a “web of data†while remaining completely ignor
Google and BEA Systems are in talks about partnering on a new initiative that will let organizations create mashups between enterprise portals and applications such as Google Maps.
In this article we'll walk through the steps for generating an RSS feed for Amazon Wish Lists using Amazon ECS and the XSLT service
Google launched a beta version of the Picasa Web Albums earlier in the week and I got invited to participate in the beta of the product. Picasa Web Albums is Picasa’s newest feature, designed to help users post and share their photos quickly and easily
This section describes what publishers should do to their web sites and web pages to make them work well with IE's feed reading support.
Blogapps - Useful RSS/Atom examples and utilities project hosts the examples and utilities from the upcoming Manning Publications book RSS and Atom In Action by Dave Johnson.
Are we shifting gears again, and getting carried away on the wings, this time, of RSS?
Fred Wilson says “RSS has to become brain-dead simple to use.†I’m pretty sure we can do it, but it would require the companies to give up hope of locking users into their software, into their extensions, their mistakes.
The ROME in question is a Java library that provides a single interface to web syndication feeds while abstracting the differences between RSS and Atom. ROME version 0.8 contains many bug fixes and support for Atom 1.0. With it you can read, create, merge
Microsoft has released a public beta of version 7 of their Internet Explorer web browser. Trelease is significant for publishers who provide RSS 2.0 feeds for their content because this is the first Microsoft release that includes comprehensive support f
Before I dig into some of the more obscure uses of RSS (in a future post), I figured I'd list out all sorts of creative ways RSS can be used beyond news headlines and blogs. Here goes:
A lot of the features and functionality of so-called Web 2.0 sites are now common elements in most current web apps and sites. It's really gone beyond what was labelled 'Web 2.0' last year, because so many mainstream websites are now using these elements.
