Content Syndication XML
Information and Content Exchange (ICE): XML specification that for content providers, standardizes the process for setting up subscribers and the process for delivering and managing subscriber content. For content subscribers, ICE standardizes the process for setting up a subscription and the process for automated content retrieval. The ICE specification provides businesses with an XML-based common language and architecture that facilitates automatic exchanging, updating, supplying and controlling of assets in a trusted fashion without manual packaging or knowledge of remote website structures. Organization: IDEAlliance. More information: ICE page on the IDEAlliance website.
Real Simple Syndication (RSS): RSS is a dialect of XML for content syndication. Some say the intialism also stands for "Rich Site Summary." Organization: Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School. More information: RSS page on the Berkman Center website.
Context for Content Syndication XML
Related Articles for Content Syndication XML
- Address XML
- Computing Environment XML
- Customer Information XML
- Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) XML
- Geospatial XML
- Human XML
- Localization XML
- Math XML
- Open Applications Group Integration Specification (OAGIS)
- Open Office XML
- Topic Maps XML
- Trade XML
- Translation XML
- Universal Business Language (UBL)
- Universal Data Element Framework (UDEF)
Author
Douglas K Barry
Principal
The Savvy Manager's Guide
Douglas K Barry is also the author of a book that explains Web Services, service-oriented architecture, and Cloud Computing in an easy-to-understand, non-technical manner.
Web Services, Service-Oriented Architectures, and Cloud Computing: The Savvy Manager's Guide (Second Edition)
by Douglas K Barry with David Dick
This is a guide for the savvy manager who wants to capitalize on the wave of change that is occurring with Web Services, service-oriented architecture, and—more recently—Cloud Computing. The changes wrought by these technologies will require both a basic grasp of the technologies and an effective way to deal with how these changes will affect the people who build and use the systems in our organizations. This book covers both issues. Managers at all levels of all organizations must be aware of both the changes that we are now seeing and ways to deal with issues created by those changes.