Clarence Westberg's Radio Weblog : No matter how cynical you get, it is impossible to keep up
Updated: 9/3/2003; 8:31:39 PM.

 

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Tuesday, August 05, 2003

Using RSS 2.0 and RDF together. I've been working on a series of issue analyses for the RSS 2.0 site. One of the questions I've been wanting to explore is whether RDF might be used in conjunction with RSS 2.0, and if so how. Today, in the comments section of the site, Dan Brickley pointed me to the example I've been looking for. He writes:
This week, a new 'RSS and jobs' site is getting some interest. http://www.rssjobs.com/rssjobs/index.jsp There is a similiar effort at http://jobs.perl.org/rss/ (eg. see http://jobs.perl.org/rss/telecommute.rss) and an old example scenario that Libby and I worked on at http://ilrt.org/discovery/2000/11/rss-query/.

I hope we all agree that such applications are an exciting part of the future of RSS and RSS-like technology. To my mind, the big question is, how can we partition the work so that we have a Web of complementary namespaces which fit together to give us better descriptions in our XML feeds.

Looking at the feeds currently served by rssjobs.com, all the structure is hidden, entity escaped, inside the 'description' tag. Date, job title, employer, location, blurb... all crushed into a single field.
Suppose you wanted to do an RSS 2.0 feed that would expose those job fields as first-class XML. And suppose further that you wanted to express the job data in terms of RDF. What might that look like? ... [Jon's Radio]
2:04:45 PM    Clarence Westberg's Links & Comments trackback []

New Wi-Fi Hot Spot Directory. WiFi411: Feedback on how they work welcome.... [Wi-Fi Networking News]
2:04:33 PM    Clarence Westberg's Links & Comments trackback []

Blood-powered "human batteries". Researchers at Panasonic's Nanotechnology Research Laboratory in Japan are developing a way to draw power from blood glucose -- mimicking the way the body produces energy from food. The result could be a device capable of producing electricity from blood, effectively turning bodies into "human batteries". The estimated power output per person? Around 100 watts, or enough to turn on an average lightbulb. Link, Discuss (Thanks, ESC) [Boing Boing Blog]

And so starts the Matrix...


8:44:09 AM    Clarence Westberg's Links & Comments trackback []

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