RSS as the Lubricant of Openness
Facebook creaks open a little more - and RSS is the lubricant. (Via TechCrunch.)
open source, open genomics, open creation
Facebook creaks open a little more - and RSS is the lubricant. (Via TechCrunch.)
What is Open Web?
Open Web is a collection of technologies and standards that enable individuals to disclose their identity, feeds, activities, friends, and social networks, while preserving their ownership over this information and enabling them to keep their privacy.
What is NOT Open Web?
Anything that is proprietary, locked in in format or provider is NOT Open Web. Open Web is about open, extensible, and license free standards.
In short this is a collection of technologies and open standards that enable individuals to disclose their identity, feeds, activities, friends, and social networks, while preserving their ownership over this information and enabling them to keep their privacy.
Sounds good to me. (Via Vecosys.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 7:15 pm 0 comments
Labels: feeds, identity, open standards, open web, opengarden, social networks
The online world is awash with XML feeds. The great thing about XML is that you can grab it and do stuff with it very easily, because it's basically a structured text file. For example, you can feed one XML stream into another, combine them, and keep on piping them around. A bit like Unix pipes.
Hey, now that's an idea:Pipes is a hosted service that lets you remix feeds and create new data mashups in a visual programming environment. The name of the service pays tribute to Unix pipes, which let programmers do astonishingly clever things by making it easy to chain simple utilities together on the command line.
What's particularly cool about this new service is the graphical approach, which looks a lot like programming flowcharts. The currently-available pipes are rather limited at the moment - this is still very new - but it's not hard to imagine some very rich stuff coming out of this. Bravo Yahoo. (Via GigaOM.)
Posted by Glyn Moody at 9:30 am 2 comments
Labels: feeds, graphical approach, hosted service, pipes, remixing, unix, xml, yahoo
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