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Content Syndication with RSS
book

Content Syndication with RSS

by Ben Hammersley
March 2003
Intermediate to advanced
224 pages
6h 27m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from Content Syndication with RSS

Serving RSS

Serving an RSS feed is simple. By far, the most common way to serve RSS is to use an ordinary web server. The feed is treated as any other text document and requested and delivered over HTTP.

RSS, however, does not prescribe the transport mechanism. Feeds can be delivered over anything from FTP to Jabber, the XML-based messaging platform.

Consuming the Feed

For a standard that started out as an add-on to a simple portal web page, RSS has come a long way in terms of user clients. RSS feeds are still being used for web page creation, but they are also being wired into desktop newsreaders, search engines, instant messaging services, and content systems for mobile phone-based services, such as the Short Message Service (SMS).

Whatever the client, the feed is requested and retrieved over the transport method of choice and delivered to a parser. RSS parsers come in various flavors: from the full-on XML ...

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 0596003838Catalog PageErrata