rdf site summary
RDF Site Summary (RSS) 1.0
White Paper RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format. RSS is an XML application, conforming to the W3C's RDF Specification. RSS is extensible via XML-namespace and/or RDF based modularization. [03 Jul 2008]
XML Watch: Tracking Provenance of RDF Data
White Paper This paper looks into the contexts feature of the Redland Resource Description Format (RDF) application framework and creates an RDF Site Summary (RSS) 1.0 aggregator as a demonstration. Provenance-tracking RDF tools are just beginning to emerge... [03 Jul 2008]
A Standard for the Publication of Government News Summaries
White Paper RSS (RDF Site Summary) has become de facto standard for the syndication of news and current events material on the Internet. This document proposes a technical standard for the publication of government agency news on the web. [03 Jul 2008]
IRC Hacks: Feed Syndicated RSS News Into IRC Channels
White Paper The abbreviation RSS stands for RDF Site Summary (or Really Simple Syndication, depending on who one believes), and it is basically a special kind of XML document that is commonly used to describe the latest items appearing on a web site. [10 Oct 2007]
The Basics of RSS
White Paper RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication", and it is a standard, public format designed for sharing headlines and the content of web sites (previously known as the RDF Site Summary). But RSS feeds are not just for news anymore. [23 Feb 2005]
Syndicate Your Headlines Using RSS
White Paper Formerly known as RDF, RSS was developed in 1999 and has quickly evolved into the dominant format for syndicating content. RSS stands for Rich Site Summary or Really Simple Syndication. It is an XML format specifically designed to share content. [21 Feb 2005]
RSS: Hot Fix for Info-Junkies
White Paper RSS is a nested acronym: RDF Site Summary, where RDF stands for Resource Description Framework. The RSS standard describes a simple framework to publish headlines and links on the Web. Although it has been around since December 2000, the standard... [15 Feb 2005]
Normalizing Syndicated Feed Content
White Paper After all, RSS stands for "Really Simple Syndication" (or "Rich Site Summary", or "RDF Site Summary", or something), and Atom is just RSS with different tag names, right? So you want to write a program to read RSS and Atom syndicated feeds. [13 Feb 2005]
The Evolution of RSS
White Paper This paper discusses the various versions of RSS, the standards behind them (DTDs, RDF, namespaces), and the future of RSS. Rich Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight XML vocabulary for describing metadata about Web sites, ideal for news syndication. [13 Feb 2005]
RDF Rich Site Summary (RSS)
White Paper RSS might stand for "Rich Site Summary," "RDF Site Summary," "Really Simple Syndication," or something else, depending upon your point of view. From the version 1.0 specification abstract: "RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight multipurpose... [02 Sep 2004]
An Introduction to RSS News Feeds Using Open Formats for Content Syndication
White Paper RDF Site Summary (RSS) is catching on as one of the most widely used XML formats on the Web. RDF Site Summary (RSS) files, based on X This paper includes sample code that demonstrates elements of an RSS file, plus a Perl example using the module... [27 Aug 2004]
A Semantic Web Shoebox - Annotating Photos With RSS and RDF
White Paper RSS 1.0 (RDF Site Summary) is a well-known XML format commonly used for syndicating news headlines. By design it is an extensible format in which metadata expressed using any RDF vocabulary can be linked to its component items, while still... [27 Aug 2004]
Simple Internet Subscriptions With VFP and XML
White Paper Many news, discussion and weblog sites let users subscribe to change notifications using RSS - the RDF Site Summary or "Really Simple Syndication" standards. This paper includes demonstrations of current uses of RSS in newsreaders, web sites... [27 Aug 2004]
Writing RSS
White Paper RSS (RDF Site Summary) is a lightweight, topical, metadata and syndication format. One of the main reasons for the use of RSS is that it's very small. RSS files usually take less then a hundred kilobytes of space. [27 Aug 2004]
