Projects tagged ‘atom’ and ‘java’


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Projects tagged ‘atom’ and ‘java’

Filtered by Project Tags atom java

Refine results Project Tags rss (24) xml (9) feed (8) feeds (7) rest (6) json (4) javascript (4) blog (4) web (4) opml (3) android (3) client (3)

[34 total ]

33 Users
   

Rome is a set of Atom/RSS Java utilities that make it easy to work in Java with most syndication formats. Today it accepts all flavors of RSS (0.90, 0.91, 0.92, 0.93, 0.94, 1.0 and 2.0) and Atom 0.3 ... [More] feeds. Rome includes a set of parsers and generators for the various flavors of feeds, as well as converters to convert from one format to another. The parsers can give you back Java objects that are either specific for the format you want to work with, or a generic normalized SyndFeed object that lets you work on with the data without bothering about the underlying format. [Less]
Created over 3 years ago.

26 Users
   

Lightweight REST framework for Java Do you want to embrace the architecture of the Web and benefit from its simplicity and scalability? Leverage our innovative REST engine and start blending ... [More] your Web Sites and Web Services into uniform Web Applications! [Less]
Created over 3 years ago.

5 Users
   

Cosmo (Chandler Server) is a Java-based content/calendar sharing server with a built-in rich web application client.
Created over 2 years ago.

3 Users

Apache Wink is a project that enables development and consumption of REST style web services. The core server runtime is based on the JAX-RS (JSR 311) standard. The project also introduces a client ... [More] runtime which can leverage certain components of the server-side runtime. Apache Wink will deliver component technology that can be easily integrated into a variety of environments. [Less]
Created 5 months ago.

2 Users

"We will either find a way, or make one." - Hannibal Barca Hannibal Barca, the great Carthaginian general, is widely regarded as the greatest strategist and tactician of all time. His ability to ... [More] engage the enemy, using innovative yet simple tactics in such a way as to ensure victory is second to none. Hannibal the code generator, strives to emulate Hannibal Barca's embodiment of minimalism, simplicity, and efficiency to advance pragmatic solutions to solve the problems associated with rapid web application development. Hannibal is much more than a code generator. It is a code generator that produces code that is tied to small but effective Hannibal packages that allow developers to efficiently tackle a finite but commonly encountered set of problems. Hannibal is written in Java, but generates code in Java, JavaScript, php, and SQL. We plan to have Hannibal generate code in other languages as well. We wanted to solve common problems encountered in web application development, without burdening the developer with the need to understand yet another tool set. Hannibal's supporting packages for Java and php merely support. When using Hannibal, it is our goal that the developer can quickly start creating code that works, and use and extend that generated code to build more interesting web applications. Here is a list of the common problems we are attempting to solve with Hannibal. Persistence. URI templating and processing. Search Validation Presentation Authorization Audit Internationalization If we can make these things easier, we can claim success. To meet this goal, here are some of the guidelines we developed over time to help of maintain focus: Ruthlessly minimize Hannibal's technology set dependencies. Rely on the target programming language built-in capabilities as much as possible. Only when necessary use open source third party software libraries. Keep the amount of Hannibal specific code to a minimum. Cater to popular open source tools for creating web based applications, such as Tomcat, and MySQL. Encourage integration with modern programming platforms like Amazon Web Services. Whenever possible choose the target programming language to be used as a configuration language over other more popular choices like property files or XML. We will try very hard to keep these promises to ourselves. [Less]
Created 12 months ago.

2 Users
   

BlogBridge is an RSS Reader/Aggregator designed for people who read and follow a large number of RSS feeds.
Created over 3 years ago.

1 Users

Implementation (server / client) to share topic maps Protocol for the Syndication of Semantic Descriptions: http://www.egovpt.org/fg/CWA_Part_1b
Created 12 months ago.

1 Users

JTentative is an online feed reader which allows you to read your feeds from anywhere. Read the wiki for more informations.
Created 4 months ago.

0 Users

eReader devices are becoming popular in the latest months. Some of them make use of the MobiPocket format (.prc, .mobi), similar to HTML but stored as a binary file and including pictures. The ... [More] advantage of such format is the reflow capability, that is, on the contrary to printed formats like PDF or PS, MobiPocket books (like HTML) are adapted to the width of the screen, allowing to resize the font to give the reader a more comfortable experience. As of today, MobiPocket books are generated with the free but privative tool Mobipocket Reader or Mobipocket Creator, which is unfortunately only available for Windows. The target of this project is to provide a command line tool to, given a OPML list of feeds, generate for each of them a MobiPocket book with their latest contents. The implementation is done in Java, using the library Yarfraw and the Mobiperl tools. [Less]
Created 8 months ago.

0 Users

Libraries for constructing, parsing, manipulating and serializing OAI-ORE Resource Maps. Foresite is a JISC funded project which aims to produce a demonstrator and test of the OAI-ORE standard by ... [More] creating Resource Maps of journals and their contents held in JSTOR, and delivering them as ATOM documents via the SWORD interface to DSpace. DSpace will ingest these resource maps, and convert them into repository items which reference content which continues to reside in JSTOR. The Python library is being used to generate the resource maps from JSTOR and the Java library is being used to provide all the ingest, transformation and dissemination support required in DSpace. Both libraries support parsing and serialising in: ATOM, RDF/XML, N3, N-Triples, Turtle and RDFa Please feel free to download and play with the code, and let us have your feedback via the Google group: foresite@googlegroups.com Project website: http://foresite.cheshire3.org/ Documentation: http://code.google.com/p/foresite-toolkit/wiki/PythonLibrary http://code.google.com/p/foresite-toolkit/wiki/JavaLibrary Subversion Checkouts: svn co http://foresite-toolkit.googlecode.com/svn/foresite-python/trunk/ svn co http://foresite-toolkit.googlecode.com/svn/foresite-java/trunk/ [Less]
Created 12 months ago.