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Microsoft making RSS a two-way street

It's devising extensions that could be used to synchronize data across different apps

November 23, 2005 12:00 PM ET

IDG News Service - Microsoft Corp. is extending the popular RSS 2.0 Web syndication format to make it "multidirectional," allowing it to be used for synchronizing information such as contacts and calendar entries across different applications, the company said.
RSS 2.0 is best known as a way to let Internet users subscribe to content from Web sites that support Really Simple Syndication (RSS) feeds. When content on a site is updated, the RSS feed informs the subscriber, often with a summary of the updated content and a link to it.
Microsoft is developing a set of extensions to RSS so that it can be used for exchanging and synchronizing content that is updated by two or more parties. Its goal is to take what is essentially a one-way publishing mechanism and make it multidirectional.
The company published Version 0.9 of the specification, called Simple Sharing Extensions (SSE) for RSS 2.0, on its Web site earlier this month and is seeking feedback for a final version.
To understand what the extensions hope to achieve, imagine two PC users who wish to share and coedit a list of items using an RSS feed. Both people publish their lists using RSS with the sharing extensions, and both also subscribe to the other's feed. Whenever either of the two updates their list, the changes are added to their feed and incorporated into the list of the other subscriber.
The extensions "enable feed readers and publishers to generate and process incoming item changes in a manner that enables consistency to be achieved," Microsoft said. "In order to accomplish this, SSE introduces concepts such as per-item change history (to manage item versions and update conflicts) and tombstones (to propagate deletions and undeletions)."
The specification could be used to keep contact lists synchronized across a user's various devices, such as a PC, PDA and mobile phone. Or it could be used by family members (or co-workers) to synchronize entries they wish to share from their personal calendars, Ray Ozzie, Microsoft's recently hired chief technical officer, said in a posting on his blog.
Ozzie's involvement in SSE is no surprise -- he created Lotus Notes, which lets workers update and synchronize calendars, documents and other files with one another. Notes was part of the inspiration for SSE, Ozzie said.
After joining Microsoft, Ozzie met with some of its product teams, including those for Exchange and Outlook, and thought about ways of synchronizing information among Microsoft products, as well as with those of other companies, he wrote. Soon after, SSE was born.
"In


Reprinted with permission from

IDG.net
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.

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