Microsoft Proposes RSS Extension 234
An anonymous reader writes "Microsoft Chief Technical Officer Ray Ozzie said this week that his company is working on a new extension to RSS that would help users with different contact and calendar software and services synchronize each other's information." From the article: "If this sounds familiar to those using IBM's Lotus Notes, it should. SSE was conceived after Microsoft's recently recruited chief technology officer Ray Ozzie brainstormed with members of the Exchange, Outlook, MSN, Windows Mobile and Messenger Communicator product teams shortly after he joined."
Yay! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yay! (Score:5, Interesting)
The extensions themselves can be standardized.
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
I reject the conflation between "GPL" and "open source," and in any case, the question is moot until Microsoft actually asserts a patent right on this, which they haven't.
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Embrace and extend (Score:4, Funny)
It embraces like a boa constrictor, and then extends like a medieval torture rack.
Microsoft, sit down, and let's hear from someone else.
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, Microsoft does have a habit of destroying standards by extending them. But they're going to do this regardless. They might as well work through a standards committee, and there isn't any indication that this will result in a proprietry product becoming part of the standard. Is there any reason other then "Cause Microsoft is evil" to not consider adding this extension to the standard?
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, theoretically, Microsoft could act responsibly and cooperatively with regards to a public standard. However, given MS's past (ie: the reality of Microsoft), it makes sense to be extraordinarily skeptical of the outcome here.
It's like this, you have this public well in the center of town, and anyone can come and take a drink, and can volunteer to help maintain and operate the well. There's one guy in town, Prince William the Third, who is known for taking free, public services and corrupting them, selling them, and otherwise claiming such things are immoral because they don't make anyone any money. He's gone into the public park, cordoned it off and charged people to play in his area. He's set vermin free in the communal corn fields. And at the local mercantile, he always takes a penny, but never leaves a penny.
So you see him heading to the well with a large bucket and a drill... Do you think he's going to:
A. Drill holes into his large bucket to loop the rope through, giving to the town a larger bucket making it easier for them to bring up water.
or
B. Fill up his big bucket, then drill a hole into the current bucket about halfway up to make using the public bucket a bit more difficult, and oh, btw, you can buy some water from his huge bucket.
Yeah, maybe this time MS will play fair. I wouldn't bet on it. In fact, I'd say it's extremely foolish to think they'll do anything other than subvert the standard in a way that's designed to most benefit them. That's just what they do. Every single action MS makes is designed to give them the most competitive advantage they can get. There's nothing terribly wrong with this, just don't be so naive as to pretend they're even remotely likely to do otherwise.
It's not that we hate MS, so we don't trust them, it's that they've lost our trust, so we hate them. They could easily earn it back. IBM did it, Apple did it. Hopefully, some day MS will do it, too.
Hopefully this will all work out for the best, but skepticism is definitely called for.
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
In fact, I'd say it's extremely foolish to think they'll do anything other than subvert the standard in a way that's designed to most benefit them.
"Anything but subvert" seems a bit harsh. Every day I work with at least one standard [w3.org] that Microsoft took a role in the development of. One with the apparent intent of specifically avoiding lock-in in several respects. The (arguably) best implementations [apache.org] isn't Microsoft's own, and in most cases they communicate with each other quite happily. And, similar to t
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
Seriously, the only way they could screw up RSS even more would be by dropping all support for it (do they even support RSS?) and using
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:3, Insightful)
Like kerberos? Like CSS?
I agree that the damage MS can do here is limited due to the nature of the proposed standard, but with MS, anything they promote as "open" (either open source or open standard) needs to be presumed guilty until proven innocent. This is based on their past behavior. I don't mean to say that seeking gain is wrong, just that with some corporations, you need to be more careful (from
Exactly what are you worried about? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hell, these extentions would not even break existing clients, the parser would just not do anything with the new nodes and attributes!
But on the other hand, you are Evolution and want to sync with Outlook, this would be *great*.
Honestly, with you guys Microsoft is damned if they to (try to create an open standard for sync
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
Care to explain the "tinfoil hat" comment? I'm not saying anything that isn't true. Every action MS takes is meant to help MS. If it helps others, that's a byproduct. MS supports tons of open standards, but only when it serves them.
I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that. I'm not saying MS is out to get me. I'm just saying that MS does whatever MS thinks will best help them, and that it's important to keep that in mind when dealin
Microsoft forfeited their "rights". (Score:2)
Let the fox in the hen house because to keep them out would be "discrimination"? Get real.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
And then get accused of not following standards. They try to work through a standards body this time and everyone says "But Microsoft's extensions can never ever become a standard. Why? Well, simply because we don't like Microsoft."
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:3, Insightful)
I await the licensing of these extensions. Do you think they'll be GPL compatible?
As Mr Jefferson would say (Score:2)
Re:Just say No (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just say No (Score:2)
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
While they could feasibly pull an exchange like variant with RSS their new tactic is a little more effective. I full expect to see their lovely new patent axe brought out on this one.
Sure, you can touch it, taste it and even change it a bit... just be careful because the axe can fall at any time.
At this point in the game, anytime anyone hears Microsoft talking about standards and services it is quite normal to watch everyone worry just like Oliver asking for more porage. (You notice he didn't ask a sec
Rambus, anyone? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:3, Funny)
US Corporations have to fight like hell these days to get their voices heard by Congress, and it's just unfair to not grant them equal rights! You progressives are all about "civil liberties, blah blah", so why don't you unite this country and [wait] Hey look! - There's a WAR over there...! I'm pulling for the guys in the grey outfits!
w00t - Go Longhorn Devils!
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
So, no, I don't trust any "standard" that MS proposes. I'll wait a few years before I think about using it...long enough that I believe the doctrine of latches and
Re:Embrace and extend (Score:2)
But if I recall, he also said that Microsoft was watching RSS, and that its popularity might force MS's hand. It seems that after noticing and disliking RSS, it's finally getting around to using it -- but, of course, with no love for standards.
It's not real
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
RSS Stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally I think this is an example of a good technology (RSS) that Microsoft is trying to co-opt by coming out with something marginally "better" -- mostly just more complex -- so they can attain some elements of control over it.
Oh and one other thing - they're basing it on the ideas underlying Exchange and Lotus Notes? I can't wait to see this one.
Re:RSS Stuff (Score:4, Interesting)
RSS is the absolutely height of simplicity. While that simplicity works for getting it out there and initially adopted, it does toss a wrench in it being a sustainable, growing technology. RSS is definitely showing signs of weakness (and the "next geners" are already chomping at the bit to switch to ATOM. I believe Google already tried to kill RSS), but thankfully it was built to support extensions (primarily just by supporting XML namespaces, but extensions were a part of the initial design).
I rashly proposed my own simplistic extension to RSS [yafla.com] to great improve the mechanical interpretation of RSS entries in certain domains.
Why wait? (Score:5, Insightful)
You don't have to wait, it is already published. Instead of just spouting off, go read the spec and judge it on its technical merits, instead of adding another needless me too "MS sucks so this must suck" post.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml/rss/sse/ [microsoft.com]
Then come back and give a reasoned opinion about the flaws in the proposed extension.
Re:Why wait? (Score:2, Insightful)
The objective of Simple Sharing Extensions (SSE) is to define the minimum extensions necessary to enable loosely-cooperating apps
[snip]
Microsoft's copyrights in this specification are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License (version 2.5). To view a copy of this license, please visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5/ [creativecommons.org]. As to software implementations, Microsoft is not aware of any patent claims it owns or controls that would b
Small but important correction... (Score:2, Insightful)
Here, let me help you with that. I think what you really meant was this:
Re:Small but important correction... (Score:2)
It is especially juvenile considering the original statement from Ozzie specifically called out that a goal was to work with non-Microsoft products.
"We brainstormed about this "meshed world" and how we might best serve it - a world where each of these products and others' products could both manage these objects and synchronize each others' changes"
http://spaces.msn.com/members/rayozzie/Blog/cns!1p yc [msn.com]
Re:Small but important correction... (Score:2)
The parent is a typical Slashbot kneejerk post, that adds nothing that we haven't heard for the last decade.
Well, since M$ hasn't changed their attitude to open standards in more than a decade, in fact since they were established, it's entirely appropriate to repeat it. The fact that a M$ engineering representative said they want to interroperate is almost completely irrelevant. M$ has a long history of talking the talk but not walking the walk.
M$ might one day reform but it will take a huge effort to
Re:Small but important correction... (Score:3, Insightful)
You: "I think what you really mean was.. you don't like oranges!" bwahahaha, high five guys!"
No it's more like this.
MS: "I like oranges"
me: "for the last five years you have done nothing but lie to me I don't believe you for one second. Please take your hands out of your pockets so I can see if you are holding a knife. The last fifty times you knifed me it hurt like hell and cost me lots of money"
See how that works?
Awesome! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Awesome! (Score:3, Informative)
Personally, I'm glad Microsoft is proposing a standard extension to RSS, instead of using their own proprietary format or protocol for this sort of thing. If you were trying to make a piece of third-party software interoperate with Exchange or Outlook, wouldn't you be glad too? Instead of trying to reverse-engineer some weird proprietary format, somebody will just extend the RSS libraries
Re:Awesome! (Score:2)
Re:Awesome! (Score:2)
Pointless (Score:3, Interesting)
Erego; pointless.
Improvements (Score:2, Funny)
I think their moto should be "if its broke, pour some paint on it so you don't see that part!"
Bloat...? Whats that?
Microsoft extensions? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft extensions? (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't think Microsoft is planning on turning RSS into a Turing Complete language or anything.
Re:Microsoft extensions? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Microsoft extensions? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Microsoft extensions? (Score:2)
You've obviously never used finger. I think finger was the original buffer overflow
Re:Microsoft extensions? (Score:2, Insightful)
Imminent Death Of The Net Predicted! (Score:2)
XMLHttpRequest (Score:5, Insightful)
XMLHttpRequest was one of those extensions and it's given us Gmail and other "AJAX" interfaces. Not all extension is bad; if it was how the heck would the industry progress?
Kerberos (Score:4, Interesting)
And sombody better cross reference this to Microsoft's patent filings.
Re:Kerberos (Score:3, Informative)
You mean the sooper sekrit details posted here [microsoft.com] under a Creative Commons license, which was linked in TFA?
Listen, I'm not prepared to take everything they say at face value, but this is probably a step in the right direction. We have an instance where they've proposed this extension and published it, for anyone to use.
Now, someone more technical than me will have to review what they've published and c
Re:Kerberos (Score:2)
Re:Kerberos (Score:3, Insightful)
This extension can NOT "break" RSS 2.0 in any way. (Score:2)
As such, this spec does not break RSS 2.0 or require any RSS 2.0 feed reader to change if it simply wants to ignore the extension (the way most RSS readers just ignore extensions). Winer wrote the spec that way specifically so e
Translation! (Score:5, Funny)
we can predict that... (Score:4, Insightful)
And then Microsoft will try to create FUD (through strategically placed speakers) within the open source community whether it is really possible for open source software to implement their "open" standard. They'll do this in an effort to scare away commercial users from adopting open source software based on the "open standard".
That way, they'll try to achieve the appearance and widespread adoption of an "open" standard while still interfering with its open source implementation.
Re:we can predict that... (Score:2)
Uhh... RSS is already XML based.
Re:we can predict that... (Score:2)
why? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:why? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:why? (Score:2)
There is a trick somewhere. I am totally clueless about the corporate networks but I can easily see from outside.
But didn't Lotus Notes suck? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah..but....look where they are now.
No, it was just ahead of it's time (Score:2)
MS was also allowed to pervert the term "Groupware" into meaning email and calandering. Back around '87 or '88 MS was out touring Exchange and promising that it would be a Notes killer, but every time they were asked if it could do tasks that was simple in Notes, the answer
RDF (Score:4, Interesting)
Part of the point of RDF is that you can embed lots of vocabularies in a single document. You can say, for example, that a RSS publisher has an attribute FoaF document, or even arbitrary FoaF properies. Or you could use an RDF version of vCard, or RDF iCal...
That's all been part of the Semantic Web for a long time.
It seems that instead of the standards, the proposal is for yet another complete extension from Microsoft.
I think RDF needs help getting the full adoption it needs, but based on what Microsoft has done to other standards (Kerberos, SPF, HTML, etc.) I don't think that this will end up being the right approach to fix any problems RSS has.
Re:RDF (Score:3, Informative)
RSS 2.0 supports XML namespaces [w3.org]. This defines such a namespace. RDF is not involved.
Re:RDF (Score:3, Informative)
But even XML namespaces makes any extension like this pretty much unecessary.
It's a shame that RSS couldn't still be RDF... RDF needs more "killer apps".
Re:RDF (Score:2)
Uh, no. What XML namespaces means is that Microsoft can declare this extension without any revision of the core RSS spec.
It doesn't mean that they don't need to declare what namespace they are using and explain what it means to other people if they expect other people to be using it and building on it, which is exactly what they've done.
XML namespaces isn't some sort of magic that eliminates the need to explain specifications, or w
Oh great, just great (Score:3, Insightful)
Then we have remote execution via RSS, system automation via RSS, a rootkit you never realized was there via RSS. FFS, use the tool for what it was intended, not a hacked-up stealth technology for taking over blogs and putting pretty pictures all over it.
Re:Oh great, just great (Score:2)
I mean why use text emails when you can use 100s of colourful and usually non-portable fonts to liven up your communication
Tom
Any patents yet? (Score:2)
response to the proposal (Score:5, Funny)
No.
Signed,
Everyone On The Internet
Re:response to the proposal (Score:2)
Re:response to the proposal (Score:5, Funny)
Dear Guy Who Invented Lotus Notes,
If I have to use a second piece of software written by you, I swear I'll chew my fingers off.
Signed,
Everyone Who Has To Use That Nightmarish Piece Of Crap
They just have to be different. CalDAV? (Score:4, Informative)
Why not join in and support the effort?
Re:They just have to be different. CalDAV? (Score:3, Insightful)
I say it's at least 70% marketing.
Already been done. (Score:4, Informative)
Creative Commons (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Creative Commons (Score:2, Informative)
Too bad I don't have mod points for you, man, and too bad your comment is buried at the bottom. To all the wankers already going off about MS patenting the specs:
Take a look at the licensing information - get to the source [microsoft.com].
Ok, if you really are that lazy, it's a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 [creativecommons.org], which means you only have to credit MS for this stuff, and release your own stuff (plugin/library?) under the same license.
Re:Creative Commons (Score:2)
But, you aren't. Pity.
Re:Creative Commons (Score:2)
Re:Creative Commons (Score:2)
So what, is it the only license possible?
Furthermore, notice how I wrote "library/plugin" instead of application. And finally, my main point is that with a CC license they can't just go and patent their concept.
Re:Creative Commons (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Creative Commons (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Creative Commons (Score:3, Insightful)
So they don't think they have any patents,
You're being somewhat naive; what M$ says and does are often completely different. It's a large organisation, different people have different opinions and given the mess that is the current patent system a submarine patent could easily turn up.
and even if it turns out they do, licenses are granted under RAND terms.
RAND terms to M$ often means "(except GPL)" and "with lots of arbitrary restrictions and sufficient legal roadblocks to make fair competition im
Re:Creative Commons (Score:2)
MS wants to destroy the GPL more then anything else in the world.
Er... (Score:2, Insightful)
Some kind of sport... (Score:2)
Some nasty people get a huge kick out of this and laugh until they cry if they can get the nice person to bend their heads over three or more times because they can't help forgiving and trusting. It really really annoys me, because I like to give people
I wanna play too! (Score:3, Insightful)
Please guys. Stop breaking things.
Just like... (Score:2, Insightful)
For the last time... (Score:3, Funny)
More of the same (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft's RSS Checklist:
1) Embrace
2) Extend
3) Extinguish
Been there, done that - ExRss (Score:2)
A collegue of mine posted some ASP.NET code on SourceForge back in July for providing Exchange mailbox data (Not just Calendar items -- Inbox, Calendar, Tasks, everything) via RSS feed:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/exrss/ [sourceforge.net]
Re:dugg this one up last night (Score:4, Funny)
gasp! that dastardly fellow!
Re:Cha? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's not just Microsoft, it's business. The sad fact is that Microsoft is even better at business than it is at programming.