Atom
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Apache Abdera: Atom, AtomPub, and Javahttp://www.infoq.com/news/2008/04/abdera The Apache Abdera project, an open source Atom Syndication and Atom Publication Protocol implementation currently still in its incubation phase, has recently reached its 0.40 milestone, an important step towards graduation. InfoQ had a chance to talk to IBM's James Snell and MuleSource's Dan Diephouse, two of Abdera's core developers, about Abdera, Atom and AtomPub.- Atom - |
Protocol Action: 'The Atom Publishing Protocol' to Proposed Standardhttp://www1.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ietf-announce/current/msg03937.html The IESG has approved 'The Atom Publishing Protocol ' as a Proposed Standard. This document is the product of the Atom Publishing Format and Protocol Working Group. The IESG contact persons are Lisa Dusseault and Chris Newman. Technical Summary The Atom Publishing Protocol HTTP-based protocol for publishing and editing web resources, and is particularly useful for (but not limited to) blogs. It supports ideas such as collections of multimedia items and categorization of items. It uses the Atom format (RFC 4287) for its messages.- REST - Atom - |
Implementing the Atom Publishing Protocol popularhttp://www.xml.com/pub/a/2006/07/19/implementing-atom-publishing-protocol-python-wsgi.html The Atom Publishing Protocol (APP) is nearing completion, many of the issues that I pointed out in a previous article have settled down, and there is work being done on implementations and interoperability. Although the interoperability work will go on for years to come, we can put together an implementation and discuss the requirements the APP puts on you, the gotchas, and the ways we can optimize the service. If you've been following along with Restful Web columns at home, you won't be surprised that the implementation is in Python. In future articles we'll start building more complex services on top of this APP implementation.- Syndication - Atom - |
Emerging eGovernment mashups popularhttp://blogs.zdnet.com/BTL/?p=3322 When I was Utah's CIO, I wrote what I called the Web Services Manifesto to create a list of principles that I though all government agencies should follow whenever they created an online resource. Their goal: set the data free. The idea is that government can't ever hope to create all the useful information resources that people need. For eGoverment to move beyond the "here's a good way to search our data" stage, these applications need to be shared and mashed-up. I hoped that by creating Web services where XML was always available, we'd allow others to build the services they needed that we'd never even think to build. It took some time, but some governments are starting to do just that. David Stephenson points to a Jon Udell column about the DC government's Center for Innovation and Reform. The first link in the main body is Live Data Feeds. Very nice. Already, the first real mashup of this data has been built. Pick a location on the right hand side of the page and see where crimes have occurred, road repairs need done, or other service requests have been made. Talk about accountability! DCStat is doing just that. The Atom and RSS feeds summarize activity, and all the details - including latitude and longitude - are included in DCStat's own XML format. Following the initial launch of the service request feed, new ones will appear at roughly two-week intervals throughout the summer and fall. These feeds will contain raw operational data about crime, property, housing code enforcement, and business and liquor licensing.- Syndication - RSS - Atom - Government feeds - eGovernment - |
On RSS and Atomhttp://www.unto.net/unto/work/on-rss-and-atom/ "My recommendation to application developers today is to use Atom 1.0, not RSS, as the basis for your content syndication." "I don’t really care if RSS becomes a generic brand name for content syndication, just like “Kleenex” has for tissues. I think it is fine if engineers recommend to their directors, 'we should support RSS in our applications. Content syndication is what our customers want.'”- Syndication - RSS - Atom - |
The Atom Syndication Format RFChttp://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4287 IETF RFC 4287, December 2005.- Syndication - Atom - |
RSS 2.0 and Atom 1.0, Compared popularhttp://www.tbray.org/atom/RSS-and-Atom People who generate syndication feeds have a choice of feed formats. As of mid-2005, the two most likely candidates will be RSS 2.0 and Atom 1.0. The purpose of this page is to summarize, as clearly and simply as possible, the differences between the RSS 2.0 and Atom 1.0 syndication languages. By Tim Bray and others.- Syndication - RSS - Atom - |
The Atom Syndication Format Internet-Draft popularhttp://ietfreport.isoc.org/idref/draft-ietf-atompub-format/ This document specifies Atom, an XML-based Web content and metadata syndication format.- Syndication - Atom - |
Secure RSS Syndication popularhttp://www.xml.com/pub/a/2005/07/13/secure-rss.html Atom's support of XML Encryption, or perhaps a smarter solution? Greasemoney! Joe Gregorio on xml.com on July 13, 2005.- Syndication - RSS - Atom - |
Atom: The Standard in Syndication popularhttp://dsonline.computer.org/portal/pages/dsonline/0507/w4sta.html IEEE Internet Computing, July 2005, Robert Sayre: The Atom format and protocol builds on earlier efforts to establish an open, extensible, interoperable, and clearly-specified framework for Web-logging applications.- Syndication - Atom - |
Atom Newshttp://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2004/06/10/AtomIETFYes Tim Bray: Yes, there will be an Atom IETF Working Group. No, there is no "standards war".- Atom - |
W3C response to IETF concerning Atomhttp://www.w3.org/2004/05/10-atom W3C wants to host the proposed Atom Publishing Format and Protocol (atompub) working group (10 May 2004)- Atom - |
An Atom-Powered Wikihttp://www.xml.com/pub/a/2004/04/14/atomwiki.html Joe Gregorio builds a simple implementation of the AtomAPI.- Atom - |
AtomEnabledAtom is a universal personal content publishing standard created by leading service providers, tool vendors and independent developers. A list of companies and developers who have AtomEnabled their tools and services is available here.- Atom - |
Atom in Depthhttp://intertwingly.net/slides/2003/xmlconf/ Sam Ruby's presentation at the XML Conference 2003.- Atom - |
Atom 0.3 snapshothttp://diveintomark.org/archives/2003/12/13/atom03 Notes from dive into mark.- Atom - |
Atom Wikihttp://www.intertwingly.net/wiki/pie/FrontPage "We're writing specifications for syndicating, archiving and editing episodic web sites."- Atom - |
Cover Pages: Atomhttp://xml.coverpages.org/ni2003-10-22-a.html Atom as the New XML-Based Web Publishing and Syndication Format.- Atom - |
Feed ValidatorSupports Atom and various RSS flavours.- RSS - Atom - |
Finally Atomhttp://danja.typepad.com/fecho/ Following the development of the syndication framework formerly known as Pie, then Echo...- Atom - |
The Atom APIhttp://www.xml.com/lpt/a/2003/10/15/dive.html Mark Pilgrim, XML.com, 15 October 2003.- Atom - |
The Atom Syndication Format 0.3http://www.mnot.net/drafts/draft-nottingham-atom-format-02.html This PRE-DRAFT specification describes version 0.3 of the Atom, an XML-based Web content and metadata syndication format.- Atom - |




