
| Think Outside the Feed | Thoughts on the emerging use of RSS by Bill French and F. Andy Seidl, Co-founders of MyST Technology Partners. | |
| | | March 06, 2006 | | Here's a perfect example of why RSS is maturing slowly | "(Ironically, the RSS feeds for these forums only include partial text descriptions, which is really irritating, and considered by most to be an RSS Worst Practice. An inflamed polyp, if you will.)" -- inkBlots This is a silly and stupid remark. RSS is an XML specification designed to solve many problems; some would find headline-only feeds both beneficial and a business requirement. Sheesh... the RSS "community" needs to get their collective heads out of their collective asses and realize that business people don't want to behave like bloggers. | | |
| | October 28, 2005 | | As we've said (for many years), RSS is a specification for solving problems. | Charlie Wood recently observed the benefits of RSS for lightweight EAI (enterprise application integration). This is neither a new idea, nor is it one that you see often; perhaps because RSS is regarded as a specification by few and a feature by many. I blame the media for this misdirection. "The original intent of RSS was to allow web sites to subscribe to each other's headlines. The technology's flexibility also allows enterprise applications to subscribe to each other's data. That's powerful stuff." - Charlie Wood Indeed, very powerful. We use RSS in that capacity quite often - read more... | | |
| | September 11, 2005 | | We're big fans of brand awareness and the brand isolation that RSS feeds produce. | Tristana appears to be quite useful (although very basic) but is an affordable avenue to pursue if your company wants to provide a branded newsreader. | | |
| |
|  |