All content and news on InfoQ about RSS
Latest featured content about RSS

- .NET,
- SOA
- Topics
- REST,
- .NET Framework
WCF is not just for SOAP based services and can be used with popular protocols like RSS, REST and JSON. Rob Windsor covers URI templates, the importance of HTTP GET in the programmable web, how to expose service operations via HTTP GET, how to control the format of data exposed by service operations, and finally how to use the WebOperationContext to access the specifics of HTTP.
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By Rob Windsor
on Jul 18, 2008,

- SOA
- Topics
- Web 2.0
In this presentation recorded at JAOO, IBM's Rod Smith discusses how technologies such as Wikis are combined with Web services and Atom and RSS feeds to form mashups, enabling the next wave of DIY-IT by combining the flexibility of user-oriented information architecture provided by active content with that of content-in-flight to provide an easy-to-use end-user integration platform.
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By Rodney Smith
on Jun 20, 2007,
News about RSS
- .NET
- Topics
- Artifacts & Tools,
- .NET Framework
InfoQ has assembled a summary of the features included in the March CTP of Visual Studio Orcas. The Orcas CTP, which is expected to be released as VS 2007, can be downloaded from MSDN.
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By Jonathan Allen
on Mar 08, 2007,
- SOA
- Topics
- REST,
- Web 2.0
"Web 2.0" expert Dion Hinchcliffe elaborates on eleven ideas he considers valuable for SOA architects in 2007, most of them connected to merging Web 2.0 and "classical" SOA concepts.
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By Stefan Tilkov
on Jan 23, 2007,
- .NET
- Topics
- Syndication
The WCF RSS Toolkit has been released. The toolkit supports exposing a service as an RSS 2.0 feed, Atom 1.0 feed and SOAP endpoint simultaneously; it can also be extended to support other wire formats. Yasser Shohoud has also blogged some code examples today.
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By Floyd Marinescu
on Jun 15, 2006,
- Java
- Topics
- Syndication,
- Open Source
The Java community might soon have a single coherent stack for doing any form of syndication, by merging the efforts and contributions from all the key contributors in the field. Discussions have emerged between the creators of IBM's Atom Reference Implementation code, the ROME community, and others about merging into a new Apache project called Abdera.
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By Floyd Marinescu
on Jun 01, 2006,