Search WebSpherePower's 6,962 WebSphere, Java, and Eclipse article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
INSIDE RSS
Introducing the WebSpherePower RSS feeds
By David Gewirtz

By now, you've probably noticed the little RSS icons that appeared all over WebSpherePower in the past week or so. A larger version of the icon is shown in Figure A.

FIGURE A

Here's a big version of our little RSS icon.

RSS, which means Really Simple Syndication, is a format that is rapidly changing how people get timely information on the Internet. If you're like us, you need to visit and read many Web sites on a regular basis. This is pretty obvious, since you're reading WebSpherePower right now.

The problem is, how do you keep up? How do you get all the latest information from all the sites you might want to visit? RSS may well be the solution.

By "subscribing" to an RSS feed, like that from WebSpherePower, you're able to see when a site's got updated information, and you can read that updated information from one program, at one time.

Bits of history
To be fair, all of the ZATZ publications have had RSS feeds since 1998. In fact, when we first published our original RSS feeds, we were the first publishing company to do so across all publications. However, back in 1998, RSS feeds were very primitive, usually containing just headlines. The feeds were used primarily by Web site developers to include our headlines on their Web sites.

Technically, those feeds were in RSS 0.91 format. However, since 1998, RSS has grown up. Weblogs, RSS readers, aggregators, and an entire industry has adopted a more extensive version of RSS, known as RSS 2.0. This version, at a minimum, supports a lot more text, making it possible to really derive value reading "feeds" from within, well, RSS feed readers.

This week, we finished updating our sites to provide RSS 2.0 feeds. We also finished building an entire feed management infrastructure that will allow us to add a lot more feeds in places where they make the most sense. Our next bit of development will be to provide a feed for each author, so if there's a particular writer you always want to read, you can subscribe to his or her feed.

What's an RSS feed?
An RSS feed is, fundamentally, a text file located on a server that contains formatted information your RSS reader can understand. It's a very simple format, but it contains a lot of valuable information.

To you, as a reader of RSS feeds, an RSS feed is simply another URL. Rather than pasting it into the address bar of your browser, you paste it into the subscribe field of your feed reader.

This is WebSpherePower's main feed:

http://www.WebSpherePower.com/feeds/newsDetails/rss20/feed.xml

If you click on that URL, you'll get a pile of XML code displayed on your screen.


1  ·  2  ·  3  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Extras > Editorials (8 articles)
   A perfect 10: celebrating 10 years online
   You can help bring security and safety back to White House email
   From New Jersey to Palm Bay, Florida
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent WebSpherePower Articles
A perfect 10: celebrating 10 years online
You can help bring security and safety back to White House email
From New Jersey to Palm Bay, Florida
A WebSphere pot o' gold
How Elvis entered the building and CES went out the window
WebSphere Application Server 6: what's it all mean?
Extending the capabilities of WebSphere Network Deployment
WebSpherePower News
Excitement brewing for JavaOne 2010, with or without Google
Large companies ignore data centre advice
Onapsis to Release ERP Vulnerability Testing Suite
Botnet Takedown May Yield Valuable Data
VMware app dev platform gazes beyond SpringSource Java
IBM Claims World's Fastest Chip
'Free Java': InfoWorld's guide to the protest goodies
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: Smartphone smarts for a mobile world
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: It's time for Lotus to double-down on Linux and open source
OutlookPower: The strange case of Outlook losing notes and requiring passwords
-- Advertisement --

How To Save Jobs
This book is about how to create and save jobs. Believe it or not, there's not a single book out there that specifically focuses on job creation and preservation -- until now.

This book, by ZATZ editor-in-chief David Gewirtz, is about helping your business work better. It's about helping you change the things you need to change so your company can perform more effectively.

Plus, through a grant from ZATZ, it's a free download.

Read it and reap.

ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login