Posts tagged as:
atom
Daily del.icio.us for January 15th
- Graeme Rocher's Blog: Grails Making Java Developers Forget about Rails - Another 10 reasons to switch from Rails to Grails from Graeme Rocher.
- rain city digest: 10 Reasons to Switch from Rails to Grails - After spending a few years really enjoying Rails it was difficult to bring myself to even try groovy and grails. But my latest contract forced me to look for alternatives, and I'm glad I did. Here are some reasons that you may want to switch
- Savvy Duck: Javascript Classes: Design Patterns, MVC and Ext 2.0 - The goal was to show how you can build an MVC application using Ext 2.0. We used a number of different patterns and components to accomplish something that can be used effectively in much larger applications than this little thing. It wasn?t necessary t
- google-feedserver - Google Code - Google FeedServer is an open-source Atom Publishing provider based on the Abdera Framework. Google FeedServer has chosen to implement simple backend data adapters that allow the developer to quickly deploy a feed for an existing data source such as a db
Related posts
Interesting
Vinny Carpenter's shared items in Google Reader
- Extensionless URLs with Java Web Frameworks Tuesday, 13 May 2008, 10:50 pm
Last week, I had a go of making a Spring MVC application use extensionless URLs. I did some googling, found some tips on the Spring Forums and believe I arrived at a solid solution. Using the UrlRewri. […] - Sun is bleeding; More engineers leave as JavaFX is pimped Monday, 12 May 2008, 11:19 am
I talked about how I thought Sun was drowning back when Chet Haase left Sun and joined the Flex team at Adobe. It wasn’t that without Chet Sun was screwed, but rather it was a sign of how things we. […] - Bill Gates vs Larry Ellison Saturday, 10 May 2008, 8:45 am
Which is the better leader? Bill Gates is focused on saving the world, and Larry Ellison? We'll he bought himself an Airforce training jet. A big contrast in culture…Pray, Fast and Be Charitable… - CallerComplaints: Track down telemarketers and umm… complain Friday, 9 May 2008, 11:30 am
Filed under: Internet, Web services, web 2.0 It's 7:30 in the morning. You're trying to get the kids fed, clothed, and out the door on their way to school without being late for work yet again. And th. […] - Groovy: Java++ by being Java– Thursday, 8 May 2008, 11:20 pm
What? Yet another dynamic scripting language for the JVM? Are you not fed up with the Java-based, and rarely used, implementations of the hyped languages Ruby and Python? Sit down and let me explain.. […] - xtype defined Thursday, 8 May 2008, 7:51 pm
Preface There has been a lot of confusion I could observe on Ext Forums as to xtype. Some people ignore it fully, some think that it is what it is not. So I’ve decided to clarify it. Definition xtyp. […] - Death by Scheduling Thursday, 8 May 2008, 5:45 am
I was on Linkedin attempting to figure out what IT executives I knew on my side of town so that I can extend an invite to them for the next OWASP meeting when I ran across a name of a horrific project. […] - Codegeist III closes Friday! Wednesday, 7 May 2008, 10:51 pm
UPDATE: corrected the closing time. It's 1pm PST, not 11am PST. Just a quick note to remind everyone that Codegeist III closes this Friday, May 9th at 1pm PST. We've had a tremendous response so far:. […] - Top 100 analyst blogs « Technobabble 2.0 Wednesday, 7 May 2008, 9:51 pm
Rants and musings on technology, AR and social media - Lazily load functionality via Unobtrusive Scripts Wednesday, 7 May 2008, 1:02 pm
David Kees has written about Using Prototype to Load Javascript Files, which is an implementation of the general technique of loading functionality via scripts based on the availability of DOM element. […] - JavaOne Parties Update Tuesday, 6 May 2008, 1:20 pm
In an effort to keep one of the top spots for "javaone parties", here's the updated list for JavaOne parties this week: Tuesday: CodeGear: Thirsty Bear @ 5:30, Open Source UnBOF: Thirsty Bear @ 8, Tan. […] - The Power of the JVM Saturday, 3 May 2008, 10:22 pm
In the past couple days, a new project release was announced that has shown once again the potential of the Java platform. Shown how the awesome JVM has not yet begun to flex its muscles and really hi. […] - The Complete Guide to the Moleskine [Moleskine] Saturday, 3 May 2008, 4:00 pm
The Moleskine won the battle of the fancy designer notebooks by a mile last month here at Lifehacker. If you want to measure your existing Moleskine addiction—or just get an intro to the fabled lea. […] - Introducing [fleXive] - A Complementary Approach to Java EE 5 Web Development Thursday, 1 May 2008, 10:17 am
This article is an introduction to Flexive, an open source Java EE 5 application development stack. The authors have extracted a complete application template and describe its use. - Ajaxian Roundup for April, 2008: CSS goodness, Ext licenses, and the Cloud Thursday, 1 May 2008, 12:34 am
March has flown by for me, and we had some great announcements, and some busy threads of discussion to show for it. The Webkit folk have had the great insight to realize that although SVG and canvas a. […] - Running Spring MVC Web Applications in OSGi Wednesday, 30 April 2008, 1:42 am
For the past couple of weeks, I've been developing a web application that deploys into an OSGi container (Equinox) and uses Spring DM's Spring MVC support. The first thing I discovered was that Spring. […] - Zoho Sheet Adds Macros and Pivot Tables [Spreadsheets] Monday, 28 April 2008, 11:00 am
Today web-based office suite maker Zoho adds pivot tables and VB macros to their online spreadsheet product. You may not use Zoho's online office suite because you're lazy and already have a Google A. […] - Put Bugs in your IDE… Atlassian IntelliJIDEA Plugin Wednesday, 23 April 2008, 1:47 pm
Introducing the Atlassian IDE plugin for IntellijIDEA (Eclipse plugin coming soon!). With the new plugin, you never have to leave your IDE to access and work with JIRA, Bamboo, or Crucible. The plugin. […] - Tips for Building Next Generation Web 2.0 Applications Thursday, 17 April 2008, 3:30 pm
I've been spending a good amount of time the last several weeks getting ready for the workshop session I'll be giving at Web 2.0 Expo next week in San Francisco on building next-generation Web 2.0 app. […] - JavaScript: The Good Parts Wednesday, 16 April 2008, 1:59 pm
Douglas Crockford just published his first book titled JavaScript: The Good Parts. After reading this book, some of you may be left with the impression that Douglas is always complaining about some a. […]
Google Reader is the bomb!
Tags: atom, bookmarks, Feeds, google, reader, rssRelated posts
Daily del.icio.us for Jul 30, 2007 through Aug 03, 2007
- InfoQ: System Integration Testing Using Spring - When it comes to system integration testing Spring adds real value. In this session, Rod Johnson discusses: integration testing and the support that Spring provides for it, issues around testing the persistence layer, testing web applications.
- InfoQ: BEA and Oracle incorporate Sun's Project Tango - In a recent article, Sun's director for SOA products, Kevin Schmidt mentioned the fact that both Oracle and BEA have incorporated Sun's Web Services stack, Project Tango. Tango is MS .NET 3.0 interop
- InfoQ: Using Java to Crack Office 2007 - With Office 2007, no third-party libraries are necessary-a Java application can now read and write any Office 2007 document, because Office 2007 documents are now nothing more than ZIP files of XML documents known as the OpenXML
- Welcome to jXLS - jXLS is small and easy-to-use Java library for generating Excel files using XLS templates. Also jXLS can be used to read XLS files and populate Java beans with spreadsheet data according to XML configuration file
- How To Read / Write Excel Spreadsheet From Java - Both JExcelAPI and Jakarta POI (HSSF) are open source software to read & write data from / to Excel spreadsheet even on non-Microsoft platforms. In my tests HSSF came out to be the clear leader and recommended solution because of robustness and features.
- Eloquent JavaScript - Eloquent JavaScript is a hyper-book providing a comprehensive introduction to the JavaScript programming language. Apart from a bookful of text, it contains plenty of example programs, and an environment to try them out and play with them.
- http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-atompub-protocol-17.txt - The Atom Publishing Protocol (APP) is an application-level protocol for publishing and editing Web resources. The protocol is based on HTTP transfer of Atom-formatted representations. The Atom format is documented in the Atom Syndication Format.
- F1 News - Grandprix.com - One of the big problems with the ongoing Stepneygate Affair is that there is a huge amount of hearsay, but not a great deal of fact
- YUI 2.3.0: Six New Components and a Prettier Face » Yahoo! User Interface Blog - We're pleased to announce the release of YUI version 2.3.0. This release features six new additions to the library as well as a new skinning architecture and a new visual treatment for most of our UI controls - plus 250 enhancements and bug fixes
- Greg the Architect : Episodes - Find out what happens when Greg tries to swallow three different SOA pitches in one day. Will he save the day, or will Greg have to chuck the project?
- Dr. Dobb's | Java Message Service | July 2, 2007 - SOAP-based web-service development continues to grow, and uses XML and HTTP to remove the implementation details from remote procedure calls. But while SOAP has broken new ground in distributed computing, message-oriented middleware such as the Java Messa
- Plans for the Rich Web Application Backplane - Both mashups and Ajax are now firmly entrenched in the Web landscape. Put them together and you have the makings for Rich Web applications. This article explains the Rich Web Application Backplane, currently a W3C Note, which is designed to bring standard
- 10 things I learned about using Hibernate/JPA successfully by SpencerUresk - I decided to share a few things I learned about using Hibernate/JPA in a large project with a complicated database setup
- OpenJPA no longer requires bytecode processing - Historically, OpenJPA required that you either run a post-compilation tool or run your application with a javaagent. The latest build of OpenJPA removes this restriction by providing various levels of support for unenhanced classes.
Related posts
Daily del.icio.us for Oct 22, 2006
-
jets3t is a Java toolkit for the Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3). Building on the Java library provided by Amazon, the toolkit aims to simplify interaction with S3 while providing powerful additional features.
-
Just a quick post to report that I’ve uploaded the two presentations of the From J2EE to Java EE Tour in my website.
-
The project provides what is essentially a complete RSS and Atom development kit, which includes feed parsers, generators, blog client libraries, an Atom protocol implementation, a set of ten useful blogapps, and an easy-to-install blog and wiki server.
Related posts
OPML support in Java - Missing in Action
Now that OPML 2.0 is out as a draft specification, I want to bring up the issue of the lack of support for OPML on the Java side. There are 2 libraries dealing with the idea of creation and consuming of syndication feeds: Informa and ROME.
Informa is an open-source (LPGL) Java framework for parsing, processing, and creating syndication feeds. The current release supports RSS 0.9x, RSS 1.0 / RDF, RSS 2.0, and Atom 0.3. Informa also support for OPML documents but it hasn't seen any development since early June 2004. The news section of the Informa site claims that there is active development but I haven't seen anything from them yet. I have used Informa in the past and it works great but hasn't kept up with changing specifications.
The other open-source (Apache) Java library ROME, created by 3 Sun engineers is also a Java library for creating and parsing RSS and ATOM feeds. Today it accepts all flavors of RSS (0.90, RSS 0.91 Netscape, RSS 0.91 Userland, RSS 0.92, RSS 0.93, RSS 0.94, RSS 1.0, RSS 2.0,) and Atom 0.3 and 1.0 feeds. Unlike Informa, ROME has active development going on and the team is putting releases quite frequently. But the major item missing is OPML support - ROME does not support OPML at this time and have no timelines documented on their roadmap.
Jakarta FeedParser is another project that I should probably mention but it's currently dormant in the Jakarta commons sandbox.
Is anyone looking at implementing OPML support for Java? Anyone know of another open-source effort going on to support OPML creation and consumption? Is Informa ever going to come out of hibernation? Anyone interested in starting a new project to implement a Java library for OPML?
Tags: apache, atom, dave_winer, Feeds, informa, jakarta, java, opml, opml2.0, rome, rss, syndication, TechRelated posts
ATOM vs. RSS - Why can't we all just get along?
I can't believe we are arguing about a syndication protocol that's not even supposed to be human readable but we are and it seems like the whole RSS vs ATOM debate is going to continue.
Dave Winer just launched a new website called Really Simple Syndication, a site devoted to helping non-tech users learn about RSS. While I hope the rational behind the site is to help purveyors of RSS, I can't help but think if this isn't another salvo across ATOM's bow. As you probably know, Dave Winer is credited for shepherding RSS to its current format. Dave has done a lot for RSS and the whole idea of syndication in general, but the current state of RSS is completely fractured. With 7 different versions of RSS that are incompatible along with ownership issues, a group of people launched ATOM as a new, open format to replace all the flavors of RSS.
I blogged about Bill Gates's comments on RSS earlier in the week and I wonder if people are just making a big deal out of nothing. I guess maybe I am contributing to it by blogging about it - More fuel to the fire. Sam Ruby has an entry entitled Détente that includes some great discussion points in the whole ATOM and RSS debate. Joshua Allen has a nice blog entry entitled RSS Politics on the whole matter. My hope is that W3C accepts ATOM as a candidate recommendation and Dave Winer and Sam Ruby work together to create ATOM 1.0 that includes the best of RSS and ATOM, without RDF.
Tags: atom, dave_winer, feed, rssRelated posts