Do you know if there is a similar way to have a RSS Feed for a specific activeMQ queue in Hawtio like in the old web console? If not, is there a wish list for future features?
There is currently no such functionality.
You can log a ticket in the hawtio issue tracker at https://github.com/hawtio/hawtio
Thanks Claus Ibsen,
I followed your advice and a ticket for it is opened.
Related
Does anyone know what is the status of Google One-tap AKA YOLO project?
It seems like all the official documentation on One-tap is gone. The cached version states:
The beta test program for this API is currently closed. We are improving the API's cross-browser functionality and will provide updates here in the coming months.
There are quite some websites which are still using this technology, either because they were in Beta and/or whitelisted by Google.
There is a new version that addresses the feedback and issues from the beta, it's available as of 2020 Q1: https://developers.google.com/identity/one-tap/web
All of the prior URLs regarding one tap are all 404 errors now. Seems like it was totally canned and they are deferring to the more generic sign in integration from a website login page.
The offical document of the project has been updated. Please see the latest status there.
this time stuff gonna be the opposite > 2. Headings:
reword//06{GUIDEDLATEVIEW||2022 blank
The graphite document says we can use the kairosdb for storing metrics but I could not find a clear guide on how to configure graphite to pull data from kairosdb. I chose kairos DB because it supports REST API to publish data. Could someone help by pointing to any resource which talks about configuring graphite to use kairosdb? Thanks in advance.
I think I got it figured it out. To plug a different datasource other than Whisper, we need a finder plugin as documented here and the Kairosdb plugin is here.
I am developing a system that has a database for news headlines from various sources. I have not worked with RSS before so I am confused about a lot of things. Can anyone please point a good tutorial for how to develop such a thing? Thanks
In my mind, I have questions like:
1) How will I get the latest news feed? do I have to check the rss feed link every few minutes and see If it's different than the previous one?
2) Is it a good practice to parse the feed xml myself or use a feed reader kind of thing?
3) Will I have any control over the feed sent to me. e.g I only need news feed for Google or Intel.
RSS is a very standard format you can start learning at w3c school.
About your questions.
If you can talk with the RSS provider, maybe they can notify each time
something new comes. They can use, for example,
XML-RPC notification.
You can also ask the RSS provider how often should you check the feed
(in case they cannot provide any kind of notification).
I think it's better to develop your own bot. There is lot of
frameworks that can deal with rss format. In case you are working with C# you can try with SyndicationFeed Class
I'm not sure if I'm undestanding your problem, but if the provider
puts a RSS link at your disposal, you must actively navigate that
feed. When you have that feed, you can work with the metadata in
order to see what's interesting for you. For example checking "category" or "channel" node.
I'm in the early stages of designing an RSS app, and I'd like to include syncing to an online RSS feed service as a feature. Most such apps make use of Google Reader's feed/syncing features, but Google is now moving sync out of its Reader service, and also its API remains undocumented. Are there any alternatives to Google Reader that offer online syncing of feeds with a desktop client, and which have a documented API?
There should be an answer to this question, but I don't think there is.
I think we got lazy. Maybe it's time to roll up our sleeves and get to work.
What about Newsblur?
http://www.newsblur.com/
Don't know anything about them, but they appear to have a reasonable facsimile of a product in this vein.
Here are their API docs. http://www.newsblur.com/api
They are a subscription service, but you can have up to 64 feeds for free.
A couple suggestions, the original web RSS Reader BlogLines is still around, though now under new management since MerchantCircle purchased the service late last year.
The APIs maybe still functional:
Or they may be deprecated/turned off, haven't tried the APIs myself.
If BlogLines API is no longer around a better bet is LiveDoor Reader (along with it's open sourced version is called FastLadder).
Livedoor Reader is a Japanese service, but FastLadder pages and documentation are available in english and Japanese.
Downloadable Open sourced versions for running on your own machines be they windows, Mac OSX, or Linux from here
There's also a FastLadder Google source Code page.
There are RSS apps for both IOS and Android that sync with LiveDoor Reader/FastLadder instances. Just search for LDR in their respective app stores.
I don't think there's a ready answer yet, but I think Brent Simmons has a rough spec of what could be a start:
http://inessential.com/2010/02/08/idea_for_alternative_rss_syncing_system
Basically, imagine a server that manages feed subscription lists and captures annotations for feed items. Those annotations for items would be things like (un)read, starred, shared, saved, deleted, or whatever else an app might want to attach to a feed item. It should stay simple and not fetch or process feeds themselves - other apps and libraries do that fine already.
Feedlooks looks close too with no ties to Google Reader - not sure about the API, though
http://www.feedlooks.com/
Years back, I'd used a self hosted Open Source app called Gregarious - It appears to have gone missing recently.
Here's the Gregarious Archive from 2010
http://web.archive.org/web/20100925221312/http://gregarius.net/
Another contender for the do-it-yourselfer might be utilizing SimplePie.org
I want to manage a Google Reader "folder" of feeds that I can add and subtract feeds to programatically. I presume that's possible but I can't seem to find any API documentation on that subject. Any advice?
thx
The public API isn't available yet unfortunately... I am eagerly awaiting it myself.
I know there is an unofficial version documented but it is outdated anyways.