RSS
Specifications
Current RSS Specifications:
According to RSS v1 specification RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight
multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format.
RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF specification
and is extensible via XML
Proposed
RSS Spec. Changes - Proposed changes to the current specification.
RSS
Specifications v2 - RSS originated in 1999, and has strived
to be a simple, easy to understand format, with relatively modest
goals. After it became a popular format, developers wanted to extend
it using modules defined in namespaces, as specified by the W3C.
RSS 2.0 adds that capability, following a simple rule. An RSS feed
may contain elements not described, only if those elements are defined
in the namespace.
RSS
Specfications v1 - RDF Site Summary (RSS) is a lightweight
multipurpose extensible metadata description and syndication format.
RSS is an XML application, conforms to the W3C's RDF Specification
and is extensible via XML-namespace and/or RDF based modularization.
RSS
Specfications v.93 - RSS specification v.93 enclosures per
item. (previous version only allowed one). Also all dates need to
conform to the Date and Time Specification of RFC 822.
RSS
Specification v.9 - places restrictions on the first non-whitespace
characters of the data in the link and url tags. RSS 0.9 supports
the full ASCII character set, as well as all legal decimal and HTML
entities. RSS 0.9 does not support other types of character data,
such as UTF-8.
If you need to create RSS specification compliant feed consider
using software. We recommend FeedForAll
!
|