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Websites usually use RSS feeds to publish frequently updated information, such as blog entries, news headlines, episodes of audio and video series, or for distributing podcasts. An RSS document (called "feed", "web feed", [5] or "channel") includes full or summarized text, and metadata, like publishing date and
[22] [32] [33] At age 14, he became a member of the working group that authored the RSS 1.0 web syndication specification. [34] A year later, he became involved in the Creative Commons organization. [35] In 2004, he enrolled at Stanford University but left the school after his first year. [36]
RSSOwl is a discontinued news aggregator for RSS and Atom news feeds. It is written in Java and built on the Eclipse Rich Client Platform which uses SWT as a widget toolkit to allow it to fit in with the look and feel of different operating systems while remaining cross-platform. [4]
As of July 2005, RSS 1.1 had amounted to little more than an academic exercise. In April 2005, Apple released Safari 2.0 with RSS Feed capabilities built in. Safari delivered the ability to read RSS feeds, and bookmark them, with built-in search features. Safari's RSS button is a blue rounded rectangle with "RSS" written inside in white.
www.msn.com /feed Microsoft Start was a web portal that featured news headlines and articles that MSN editors chose. The app included sections for top stories, regional events, international events, politics , money, technology, entertainment, opinion, sports, and crime, along with other miscellaneous stories.
Bloglines was a web-based news aggregator for reading syndicated feeds using the RSS and Atom formats. Users could subscribe to the syndicated feeds for free using a web browser . Bloglines offered an application programming interface that maintainers of web could use to write software to read feeds, search its database of feed entries, and ...
RSS feeds lets you subscribe to specific webpages, blogs, news headlines and more. Once you've subscribed to an RSS feed, updated info from the feed automatically downloads to your computer so that you can view updates in an easy-to-read format later on.
TheGrio is to "focus on news and events that have a unique interest and pronounced impact within the national African Americans audience," [2] offering what co-founder and Executive Editor David Wilson feels is "underrepresented in existing national news outlets".