January 14, 2005 – 12:00 am
Don’t mind me, I’m checking out Technorati’s new ‘tags’ system.
January 11, 2005 – 12:00 am
Dan Lyke of Flutterby writes about the item on Coverville:
http://www.coverville.com/index.xml works for me for enclosures with
bashpodder.
Dan mentioned the script last November.
It’ll collect the audio links from the URLs you configure it with. From there you can use a bit of AppleScript glue to drop the files into iTunes.
January 8, 2005 – 12:00 am
I love covers of songs. It’s always a treat to hear someone’s take on a Elvis Costello classic. And while I do not own a single Grateful Dead album, I have several album’s worth of covers of the Dead.
Thus, it was a great pleasure to discover Coverville, a podcasting site that puts out several half [...]
December 1, 2004 – 12:00 am
Brent Simmons describes the model he uses for consuming RSS and Atom feeds in Net News Wire.
His internal data format abstracts away from RSS and Atom so that when he displays a feed, he’s only manipulating Cocoa objects.
He says, this is ‘beginning programmer stuff,’ but it’s a powerful technique.
At my old, defunct, company, 2Roam, we [...]
November 24, 2004 – 12:00 am
You can change the name of this feed on LJ.
The rest of you lot can ignore this post.
September 30, 2004 – 12:00 am
Updated with a pointer to the latest version of Tantek’s stump speech on ‘Meaningful XHTML’, and a fix to a broken glyph.
Tuesday night Kevin Marks and Tantek Çelik of Technorati gave a talk at SDForum on Semantic XHTML. Though, instead of calling it Semantic XHTML, I’d call it Lossless XHTML.
The first example Kevin walked us [...]
September 1, 2004 – 12:00 am
I’ve listed the feeds I have in a box on the right-hand-side of the web-browser view of this post.
But you’re probably reading this in an aggregator, so:
RSS 1.0, Full Posts
Atom 0.3, Full Posts
del.icio.us RSS
del.icio.us Subscriptions RSS
Kittens in Atom 0.3
LiveJournal
Hybrid RSS 2.0
Hybrid Natter RSS 2.0
August 30, 2004 – 12:00 am
So my friend Eileen Gunn publishes her book of short stories. And her partner, typography guru John Berry, designed the book. Pretty cool.
Eileen also edits The Infinite Matrix. The Infinite Matrix has a weblog by Howard Waldrop, which is amazing considering I don’t think he has a computer.
The Infinite Matrix also has an RSS feed [...]
August 8, 2004 – 12:00 am
[ via Rafe ] FeedBurner now lets you merge your photo feed from Flickr and your del.icio.us linkstream with an XML syndication feed.
This is something I’ve wanted to sit down and write some XSLT for.
So I’ve merged Atomic Kittens, del.icio.us/whump with my full-text Atom feed: creating a shambling RSS 2.0 meta feed.
What’s not to like:
Entries, [...]
August 6, 2004 – 12:00 am
Erik Thauvin built an RSS 2.0 reader in Sherlock. He’s looking for people to help with things such as persistence and support for RSS 1.0 (RDF) and Atom.
Our corporate masters gave Buzz the blessing to release his del.icio.us bookmark browser!
Woah, Blogger’s all grown up: permalinks, XHTML, and everything. Well done guys, well done.
And Dave, don’t whinge about Atom, just use XSLT. There’s even an XSLT engine that runs in Frontier/Radio.
February 25, 2004 – 12:00 am
I wanted to go to the SDForum meeting on RSS last night, but couldn’t make it. Fortunately, Brian Cantoni posted his notes.
February 24, 2004 – 12:00 am
Live Journal now supports Friend of a Friend feeds. Go to http://www.livejournal.com/users/username/data/foaf for an example.
You’ll get back a list of all the Live Journal accounts that the user has ‘friended’, along with the links to their FoaF and Journals.
You can also get syndication feeds at http://www.livejournal.com/users/username/data/rss and http://www.livejournal.com/users/username/data/atom.
So you have enough to start building an [...]
February 20, 2004 – 12:00 am
Jon expresses my frustration at people angry at Google for switching from RSS to Atom:
The fact that we are now going to have a war over formats that are separated by a trivial XML transformation is almost as depressing as February in New England.
Going back to the classic story of George Leroy Tirebiter:
I don’t know [...]