RSS and Atom in Action: Web 2.0 Building Blocks

RSS and Atom in Action: Web 2.0 Building Blocks
Price: $39.95 USD
An innovator's guide to application development with blog, wiki, and newsfeed technologies, this book introduces the new ways of collaboration enabled by these technologies and focuses on the fundamental concepts needed to understand how the technologies can be used in real world applications. Blog and wiki server internals are covered in depth, and newsfeed formats and web service protocols for blogging are covered from a developer's point-of-view. Also covered are a variety of techiques programmers can use to monitor blog conversations, such as newsfeed search engines, and ways to join in the conversation such as comments, trackbacks, and Weblogs.com pings. Examples in Java and C# are provided to show how to parse Atom and RSS format newsfeeds, how to generate valid newsfeeds, how to serve them efficiently, and how to automate blogging via web services based on the new Atom protocol and the older MetaWeblog API. Focus is given to more than a dozen blog apps—small but immediately useful example applications based on blog, wiki, and newsfeed technologies.
Author: Dave Johnson
Publisher: Manning Publications
Customer Reviews
  • Exceptional Book!
    This book is one of the best books I've read in sometime, and I read quite a bit! I seldom give 5 stars, but this was any easy choice. The author provides comprehensive, logical coverage of this exciting technology area. The best part is that the book is just the beginning! His samples and associated software are all available and maintained online. Unlike too many books published these days, the grammar, spelling and usage are superb! If you are unsure, don't delay! Go ahead and purchase it.
  • RSS and Atom from the application developer perspective
    I've read other books on RSS; this one is somewhat unique because it covers RSS and Atom from the application developer perspective; it's not a book on XML or the RSS/Atom's syntax; it's aimed at programmers that want to build applications that handle RSS/Atom feeds. So you will find plenty of real-world code, both in Java and C#. Developers working in other platforms will miss the direct benefits of the sample code and applications, but I guess it would e a worthy read for them as well (it was for me)
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