What an RSS is

September 25, 2008

RSS is a Internet language for some kind of adress that you can put in an RSS application. Consequently, these applications give you the informations (often articles) that you want to have. That is why we call RSS “aggregators”, because with it, you can aggreg exactly the informations you want. For example, if you want to have information on a very precise subject, like the media economy in Germany, you can get the RSS on that on the website of the AFP, and directly receive thses articles.   

 

According to me, one of the most innovating application of last years remains Netvibes, even if it is clearly not new anymore. Because the issue of nowaday Internet is not just to create new applications, but to make the use of these applications easier. That is exactly what Netvibes do, allowing you to put all your favorite website, applications or RSS on the same page. That avoids you to loose your time going on each websites you want, and it alloow  everyone to have a very personal approach of Internet informations.  

 

 

 

 

 

Talking about an “e-culture” is not a mistake, because the Internet, since its begining at the end of the sixties, has always been developed with a part of ideology on its side. Of course, we could say the same thing for every invention: a creator always wants to reach a goal, he always wants his invention to make to world or the life better, or at least easier. But the case of Internet is clearly special, because the web has been created by two differents families of developers who both had strong and varius idiologies and utipias: university teachers and “hackers”.

Developping the Internet system, american university teachers have, since the begining, tried to create in the same time an utopy ok studies and work. Everything had to be done together, there should be in that process individual working. Consequantly, every teacher always gave his results to his collegues, and that’s how the “sharing” ideology of Internet was born. An ideology very powerful today, with the share of information on the web.

The second family, “hackers”, has quicly adopted the technology of Internet, and has brought its wishes and utopias in it. These persons were often linked to the “contre-culture” of the seventies, and made the Internet a system which ad to help the community. They also perceived the web as a free way of communication, a vision never such present than today.