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June 14, 2004

RSS Middleware

In an article about Google and its decidedly different approach from Microsoft in creating network-based information repositories, Steve Gillmor spends a paragraph talking about a new RSS router that he saw demoed by Adam Bosworth (of BEA) and his son Alex:

In his eWorld keynote, BEA's chief architect, Adam Bosworth, cited the similar transformation around the GUI, which gave procedural control to users. Now RSS is creating another shift, away from the Web request model to user-controlled aggregation. TiVo-like user metadata can be harvested to offer services in return for access to group and trend data. And as RSS containers become more intelligent about applying authority filtering to feeds, the signal to noise improves. Bosworth showed eWEEK Senior Writer Darryl K. Taft and me an intelligent RSS router, built atop his Alchemy extended browser project, a framework that uses declarative metadata dynamic caching to create a rich conversation between a thin client and the server cloud. Sounds like HailStorm, I told Bosworth, who didn't disagree. But a HailStorm based on a framework BEA will open-source.
From Gmail a Gentler HailStorm?
Referenced Mon Jun 14 2004 11:21:52 GMT-0600

Steve's blog has an extended transscript of the conversation during the demo. Some interesting tidbits in there. I'm looking forward to listening to last week's Gillmor Gang to see if it comes up.

11:25 AM | Recommend This | Print This

Unintentionally Cleaning Out My Inbox

While reading mail, my mail reader (Apple's Mail.app) popped up a message about some kind of error occurring during compaction and stated that my mailbox would be returned to its original state. Well, not quite. Actually, it was returned to its original state from that session except that everything that had been in there before the last download was gone. I'll see what I can recover from backup this morning, but if you sent me mail in the last while that hasn't been answered, contact me again.

06:33 AM | Recommend This | Print This