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Content syndication with RSS
Preface
Audience
Assumptions This Book Makes
Conventions Used in This Book
Comments and Questions
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1 What Is Content Syndication?
1.2 A Short History
1.3 Why Syndicate Your Content?
1.4 Legal Implications
Chapter 2. Content-Syndication Architecture
2.1 Information Flow and Other Metaphors
2.2 And at the Other End
2.3 Structuring the Feed Itself
2.4 Serving RSS
Chapter 3. The Main Standards
3.1 RSS 0.91
3.2 RSS 0.92
3.3 RSS 2.0
3.4 RSS 1.0
Chapter 4. RSS 0.91, 0.92, and 2.0 (Really Simple Syndication)
4.1 RSS 0.91
4.2 RSS 0.92
4.3 Creating RSS 0.9x Feeds
4.4 Once You Have Created Your Simple RSS Feed
Chapter 5. Richer Metadata and RDF
5.1 Metadata in RSS 0.9x
5.2 Resource Description Framework
5.3 RDF in XML
Chapter 6. RSS 1.0 (RDF Site Summary)
6.1 Walking Through an RSS 1.0 document
6.2 The Specification in Detail
6.3 Creating RSS 1.0 Feeds
Chapter 7. RSS 1.0 Modules
7.1 Module Status
Chapter 8. RSS 2.0 (Simply Extensible)
8.1 The Specification in Detail
8.2 Module Support Within RSS 2.0
8.3 Producing RSS 2.0 with Blogging Tools
Chapter 9. Using Feeds
9.1 Using RSS Feeds Inside Another Site
9.2 Other Outputs and Selective Parsing
Chapter 10. Directories, Web Aggregators, and Desktop Readers
10.1 Directories: Introducing Syndic8
10.2 Web Aggregators: Introducing Meerkat
10.3 Desktop Readers
Chapter 11. Developing New Modules
11.1 Namespaces and Modules with RSS 2.0
11.2 Case Study: mod_Book
11.3 Extending Your Desktop Reader
11.4 Introducing AmphetaDesk
Chapter 12. Publish and Subscribe
12.1 Introducing Publish and Subscribe
12.2 Rolling Your Own: LinkPimp PubSub
12.3 LinkpimpClient.pl
Appendix A. The XML You Need for RSS
A.1 What Is XML?
A.2 Anatomy of an XML Document
A.3 Tools for Processing XML
Appendix B. Useful Sites and Software
B.1 Specification Documents
B.2 Mailing Lists
B.3 Validators
B.4 Desktop Readers
Colophon
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