Difference between revisions of "RSS"

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In 1999 Netscape designed RSS 0.90 for use with my.netscape.com, which also supported scriptingNews format.  
 
In 1999 Netscape designed RSS 0.90 for use with my.netscape.com, which also supported scriptingNews format.  
  
RSS 0.90 Netscape Based on RDF  Obsoleted by 2.0
+
{|
RSS 0.91 UserLand                                      Obsoleted by 2.0
+
|RSS 0.90 |Netscape |Based on RDF  |Obsoleted by 2.0
RSS 1.0         RSS-DEV Working Group Based on RDF  Active module development
+
|-
RSS 0.92/3/4 UserLand                                      Obsoleted by 2.0
+
|RSS 0.91 |UserLand                                      |Obsoleted by 2.0
RSS 2.0         UserLand                                      Active module development
+
|-
 +
|RSS 1.0 |RSS-DEV Working Group |Based on RDF  |Active module development
 +
|-
 +
RSS 0.92/3/4 |UserLand                                      |Obsoleted by 2.0
 +
|-
 +
RSS 2.0         |UserLand                                      |Active module development
 +
|}
 
[http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2002/12/18/dive-into-xml.html More information]
 
[http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2002/12/18/dive-into-xml.html More information]
  
  
 
An RSS 2.0 document, called a "feed", "web feed", or "channel", contains either full text or a summary of content from a linked website. It is an easy way to keep up with new information on the user's chosen websites. e.g. feeds can be sent directly to a user's inbox.
 
An RSS 2.0 document, called a "feed", "web feed", or "channel", contains either full text or a summary of content from a linked website. It is an easy way to keep up with new information on the user's chosen websites. e.g. feeds can be sent directly to a user's inbox.

Revision as of 22:48, 16 January 2008

Link to Main Page

Back to Web 2.0



RSS - RDF Site Summary aka Really Simple Syndication

Really Simple Syndication (RSS 2.0)

RDF Site Summary (RSS 1.0 and RSS 0.90)

Rich Site Summary (RSS 0.91)


In 1997 Dave Winer at UserLand designed the XML syndication format scriptingNews.

In 1999 the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) published their specifications for the RDF format.

RDF - Resource Description Framework is a family of World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) specifications which integrate various applications and events using XML as an interchange syntax.

In 1999 Netscape designed RSS 0.90 for use with my.netscape.com, which also supported scriptingNews format.

RSS 0.92/3/4 |UserLand |Obsoleted by 2.0 RSS 2.0 |UserLand |Active module development
Netscape |Based on RDF |Obsoleted by 2.0
UserLand |Obsoleted by 2.0
RSS-DEV Working Group |Based on RDF |Active module development

More information


An RSS 2.0 document, called a "feed", "web feed", or "channel", contains either full text or a summary of content from a linked website. It is an easy way to keep up with new information on the user's chosen websites. e.g. feeds can be sent directly to a user's inbox.