Physicists just learned something major about the proton.
@Gizmodo reports that "by exploiting decades-old data and a 50-year-old prediction about gravity’s import on subatomic particles, a team of physicists has teased out a measurement for a second mechanical property in the proton."
Ich glaube, dass sich viele an den Kopf gefasst haben, als Frau #Merkel den Ausstieg aus #Atom beschlossen hat. Ebenso haben sich viele an den Kopf gefasst, als Herr #Benz die Pferde vor'm Wagen weglies.
Frage: machen wir was, um anderen zu gefallen?
Oder weil' s' klug ist?
Feed auto-discovery (for RSS, Atom, and/or JSON Feed) enables feed readers to find the URL of related feeds when you enter the URL of a web page. https://dri.es/rss-auto-discovery
Il y a vraiment plus de médias au Québec et au Canada qui doivent supporter le #rss . Surtout avec le fait que Google ne partagera plus les nouvelles. Le RSS ou les feeds #atom permettent de recevoir facilement les nouveaux articles qu'on ne peut plus avoir autrement
Good point by @robb: “Even if people only ever add your website into their feed reader and let the app find the RSS feed […], showing an RSS link reminds people that RSS exists, a win for the open web.” https://rknight.me/please-expose-your-rss/
Nice to see that my first ever published #TYPO3#extension EXT:feed_display is now used more and more. In the last months there was a significant increase in download numbers. Maybe this correlates with the increasing usage of TYPO3 #v12? #rss#atom#feed#SimplePie
I recently read Darek Kay's excellent post about styling RSS feeds and wanted to do something similar. So, here's my simple guide to styling your WordPress blog's RSS / Atom theme. The end result is that if someone clicks on a link to your feed, they see something nicely formatted, like this: Prerequisites This involves […]
Is there a standard way to declare that your Atom/RSS feed contains full articles and not just partials/summaries? I’ve noticed that the https://webfeeds.org/rss/1.0 namespace defines a webfeeds:partial element but I have never seen it used (I searched all the code forges and search engines. Not one example).
This is unrelated to feed pagination and archive feeds; I’m talking about having a way to say that each entry contains the full-text of each article.
I remember when the primary definition of an online "feed" was an RSS or ATOM XML file published by a website to provide automated access to recent updates on that website or potentially some other site. We subscribed to feeds by actively choosing to add a feed to the feed reader of our choice, as one might (still) subscribe to a magazine or newsletter these days. We could recommend blogs or news sites to our friends or other people who "followed" us online by linking to their URLs on our own blogs or via email.
Let's reclaim that sense of a feed as a consciously chosen online diet – not a synthetic mashup generated by opaque algorithms.
I'm really turning into "old woman yells at cloud", aren't I?
Wie intelligent is Künstliche-Intelligenz und deren Betreiber?! Ich dachte, die Industrie ist mittlerweile wissender. Anscheinend nicht und doch so wie damals.
»Atomantrieb für energiehungrige KI-Server:
Amazon, Microsoft und Google sichern sich in den USA Atomstrom zur Versorgung ihrer stromdurstigen (KI-)Rechenzentren.«
In case you have been wondering why I have kept quiet -- I've been experimenting reading feeds on a FreshRSS instance as an alternative to social media. Hope it sticks.
I have this blog set up and ready for writing using a bare, classic web stack with no framework, no static site generator, just html/css files and some short scripts in JS and OCaml.
The only thing I feel is missing is an RSS feed. Presently I am feeling very inclined to just rolling my own RSS using the very same stack (a text editor and scripts) instead of switching to some SSG just to get an RSS feed. Something tells me that this is a sinful, heretic thought.
Ideas welcome on how to avoid such heresy. Encouragement to just do it also welcome.
🧵 …to find the corresponding RSS and Atom feeds of exciting and interesting blogs and co. on the Internet, you can search on @feedle. I have already informed you about this here in Fediverse. And it's easy to subscribe in the web software above.