Microsoft To Share Its Plans for Longhorn RSS Support
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Two years ago at the first Microsoft Professional Developers Conference (PDC) dedicated to Longhorn, Microsoft officials showed how Microsoft planned to support Really Simple Syndication (RSS) in Longhorn. On Friday, the Redmond, Wash., software mogul is set to provide an update on its plans for baking RSS into Longhorn. Microsoft is expected to take the wraps off its updated strategy at the Gnomedex conference, which kicks of in Seattle tomorrow.
Last month, MSN officials discussed Microsoft's plans to build syndication feeds into the messaging alerts, a Windows screen saver and Web search. The MSN unit launched earlier this year its MSN Spaces blogging tool and has built a protoype of an RSS aggregator, known as Start.com, which is in beta test. Microsoft Research's social-computing group dabbled with RSS as part of its "Wallop" social-networking project. (A number of the social-computing researchers recently joined the Windows division.) Various Microsoft employees have built RSS-specific projects on their own time, as well. Addy Santo, a senior consultant with Microsoft Consulting Service's Center of Excellence developed an application called BlogWave that enables the automated generation and scheduled publishing of RSS feeds. Although not a Microsoft-labeled product, Santo's tool might provide some indication of the type of information that Microsoft could syndicate beyond just content. BlogWave is especially, but not exclusively, tuned to publish SharePoint lists and libraries as RSS feeds, with no SharePoint Server modifications required.
When Microsoft first discussed its plans for RSS and Longhorn at the PDC 2003, it planned to provide an RSS-feed reader via the "Sidebar" pane that was originally set to be part of the Longhorn user interface. At the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference this spring, however, Microsoft officials acknowledged that Sidebar was unlikely to be part of the revamped Longhorn client, which is set to ship later next year. Microsoft partners said that the IE team is planning to provide RSS support as an integrated part of IE 7.0. Microsoft officials have declined to comment on the planned IE 7.0 feature list. IE 7.0 is expected to be integrated into Longhorn, as well as to be ported to Windows XP and subsequent Windows releases. |

