| By Java News Desk | Article Rating: |
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| March 19, 2004 12:00 AM EST | Reads: |
27,793 |
Gosling himself describes the application as "pretty straightforward."
"The most interesting thing," he says, "is what it does to be fast at startup: all news feed reading is done by a swarm of low priority threads, one for each feed. So all feeds get fetched in parallel. This is very easy to do in Java: the threading API and networking support made it all straightforward."
"It comes with a preset list of subscriptions," continues Gosling. "You can unsubscribe to news feeds by using the 'unsubscribe' menu entry. You can subscribe to feeds by using drag-and-drop of RSS URLs or HTML pages with rss+xml links. There's a 'Help' page that explains it all."
"All the sources are there," Gosling adds, "as well as a JAR file that works on any platform, and a Mac OS X installation."
Gosling doesn't mention Tim Bray, who has just joined Sun to work on - among other things - developing new applications for blogs and the RSS technology that has grown out of them. ("I think that this is potentially a game-changer in some respects, and there are quite a few folks at Sun who share that opinion," Bray said this week.)
Neither does he make any comment as to whether JNN is likely to be used by folks at Sun to monitor the growing horde of Microsoft bloggers!
Published March 19, 2004 Reads 27,793
Copyright © 2004 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
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JDJ News Desk monitors the world of Java to present IT professionals with updates on technology advances, business trends, new products and standards in the Java and i-technology space.
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IdeaBank 03/19/04 05:23:32 AM EST | |||
Wired online has an interesting story about transferring large files across the Internet using not JNN but a combination of RSS and BitTorrent technology. |
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Anon 03/19/04 05:20:22 AM EST | |||
Once the syndication format wars settle down I hope we''re |
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