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Flashy doesn't necessarily mean shallow in terms of functionality.
Dave "released" something.
Honestly, I don't even *like* RSS, I just do it because I have to. I'd much rather browse to a real site and look at it in the way they wanted the content to look. Reading RSS is like sitting outside a movie theater reading the script to the movie instead of watching the actual movie.
I don't suppose Dave has done this for any other sites like the BBC?
RSS gives a standard format for publishing pages with tags, which can then allow clients to read tags in the pages. There have been programs to filter and select pages from sites for years; RSS just by adhering to XML is able to standardize this and make it easier for everyone to do, so different applications can use the same data.
This will help streamline filtering and notification.
It doesn't mean everyone will want to view a site in an RSS dump, whether its a list or something else. The reason Drudge Report is still popular despite the number of news filters or blogs out there, is that its user formatted and edited.
It also doesn't invalidate the nicety of the NY Times Reader for Vista. A main problem with the Vista application, is that its restricted to NY Times, so you have a separate reader Application for the Seattle-Post Intelligencer, and you'll have a separate reader for every single paper. Another problem is that it seems it shouldn't necessarily be a desktop-only experience. But you know---we have WPF/E (Silveright) now. It will take a little more to make the NY Times reader a meaningful application but it was meant as a demonstration of WPF.
I have no idea why you think NY Times Reader and Dave Winer's demonstration are in competition with each other.
And guess what:
"And earlier this month at a meeting in NY, two engineers at the NY Times set me off in a new direction, with a very simple bit of advice. They told me to look in the HTML source code of their stories." - Dave Winer (http://www.scripting.com/stories/2007/10/22/som...)
Dave GOT THE IDEA from the people who helped make the NY Times Reader. Why do you think "Microsoft made it for them". THEY worked on it and they're planning to update it in the future.
What is there to get?
Everyone knows whats going on; Microsoft, the New York Times, Dave Winer, and everyone else who's paying attention.
It sounds like someone who says because we can open up a Costco and Walmart in every town in the world, its ok if corner stores are demolished and every town in the world becomes a cultureless stripmall where people buy things in bulk they don't need.
And people do say that, because they're too caught up in business hype and fashion. XML is a good standard, but its also democratizing business hype by making consumers feel like they're part of the hype machine.
The only thing significant about RSS is that its a part of a large standardization process for things that were done a long time without standards.