Chapter 8. RSS 2.0 (Simply Extensible)
Honest disagreement is often a good sign of progress.
�Mahatma Gandhi
Readers who are taking each chapter in
order may be puzzled as to why I have gone from RSS 1.0, with its
complex RDF capabilities and syntax, back to a much simpler standard.
I have done this for two reasons. First, by now you should be fully
aware of the concept of XML namespaces and the idea of modules.
Second, because RSS 2.0 is the latest RSS standard to be released,
and it is the newest thing in this book, it makes sense to go in some
sort of chronological order.
Finalized on 19 August 2002, RSS 2.0 was the result of a great deal
of argument and distress within the RSS development community.
Perhaps inspired by the announcement of this book, the community had
spent the summer of 2002 looking for ways to improve the RSS
specification and�if possible�recombine the two strands.
The major stumbling blocks were, of course, RDF and
modules.
As you will see, the resultant specification managed to incorporate
one of these wishes � modules � but again rejected any
use of RDF. Further arguments over the name (many people wanted to
call it RSS 0.94 � 0.93 was abandoned previously) and the way
in which the specification was decided led, sadly, to a similarly
antagonistic position as before, though it did make the simpler
strand of RSS a great deal more useful.
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