September 3, 2002, 12:27 PM ET
Tuesday's lunchtime links
CSS guru and standards evangelist Eric Meyer stresses the time and money benefit of Web standards in an interview with User Interface Engineering. (Link seen on Small Initiatives)
Editor and Publisher reports the Chicago Tribune will include a commemorative CD-ROM with its Sept. 11 papers. According to the article, the disc will include "all 600 Tribune stories related to the attacks that ran between Sept. 11 and Sept. 21 of last year, streaming-video interviews with 25 Tribune reporters who covered the story, and more than 300 photographs of related images, including many that never ran in the paper." Very nice; I hope they make this content available on the Web.
September 3, 2002, 12:05 PM ET
BBC News site offers syndication feeds
IMPORTANT UPDATE, June 24, 2003: Even more BBC RSS feeds have been released. See how to access them.
IMPORTANT UPDATE, Sept. 9: I've been told many of these feeds will not work for much longer. I've bolded the feeds that will remain working. (The rest of the original blog entry will remain untouched for posterity's sake.)
Via Danny O'Brien: The BBC News site is offering a beta version of official RSS feeds, which syndicate headlines and short descriptions of stories. (Here's the BBC's announcement, which says "XML and RSS feeds will be available over the coming months.") Other blogs named four of the feeds, but I did some digging and found a slew of others:
Regional feeds
- United Kingdom
- England
- Scotland
- Northern Ireland
- Wales
- World
- United States
- Europe
- Africa
- Asia-Pacific
- Middle East
- South Asia
Entertainment feeds
Education feeds
Business feeds
Other feeds
This is a smart move on the BBC's part. It means increased traffic and increased visibility for news.bbc.co.uk, because users are able to syndicate BBC headlines to their own sites and read syndicated content via an RSS reader. (Here's more RSS info.) Yes, it was possible to manually create an RSS feed from that site before, but having an official feed is significantly less troublesome. It's always refreshing to witness a news site that has a clue, technologically.

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