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Introducing the new Windows CE Power channels (continued)

In any case, Carmen has developed a neat piece of software called, appropriately, Carmen's Headline Viewer. Carmen's Headline Viewer lets you bypass the browser and view the headlines from popular sites in the window of a standalone application, as you can see in Figure C.

FIGURE C


Carmen's Headline Viewer lets you view Windows CE headlines. Roll over picture for a larger image.

We asked Carmen to help us understand why someone would want to use a standalone application instead of a web browser. Here's what she told us:

Good question. A web browser is a very good general purpose client. It does a lot of things pretty well. It is good for viewing HTML and for interacting with simple sites in a fairly simple and unstructured way.

However, a dedicated application such as my Headline Viewer can be specialized to deal with specific types of content. Because it is structured, more is known about it and more automatic processing can be done. The same data can be presented in multiple views. It can be sorted, filtered, characterized, re-formatted, an so forth.

I see syndicated content and XML bringing some "law and order" to the Web in a way that is not at all heavy-handed. I do hope that the formats stay simple enough so that the barrier to entry is low. There are some big-ticket organizations getting interested in syndication, but that's not where the fun is. The fun is when small sites with interesting and unusual information, gain a wider audience because their content becomes more accessible.

It may take a while, but I can see a time in the future where many of the "clients" on the Web are not humans sitting at Web browsers, but other programs that are locating and pulling down data on behalf of the user. The distinction is somewhat subtle. Right now most of the fetches from the Web are explicit. In my hypothetical future more of them will be implicit.

Carmen's program is still in beta (version 0.8.0, as I write this) and there are a few minor gotchas with the Windows CE Power channel. Fortunately, they're extremely easy to fix. Once you've downloaded her program (see Product Availability and Resources at the end of this article), you can launch her program. Then select Windows CE Power and click the Settings button. Next, click the Providers tab, as shown in Figure D.

FIGURE D


You can add or change your channel information easily using the Providers tab. Roll over picture for a larger image.

You'll need to change the Data URL field to:

http://www.windowscepower.com/shares/userland-rss/channeldata.xml

Next, change the Site URL to http://www.windowscepower.com.

Once you do this, Carmen's Headline Viewer will show both the news headlines and article titles, as shown in Figure E.

FIGURE E


Carmen's Headline Viewer now shows all the good stuff. Roll over picture for a larger image.

If you also want to view PalmPower and DominoPower Magazines using Carmen's Headline Viewer, you won't need to go through these changes. It all works fine "straight out of the box".

Windows CE Power headlines on your Web site
If you're a Web site developer, you can now include the latest Windows CE Power news headlines and article titles on your site. This will add value to your site by showing your support for Windows CE Power, and by providing the latest information to your site's visitors. To do this, we make available special "stub" files that you can incorporate into your Web site. Any time our publication is updated, these stub files are updated as well, so you can have the very latest information at all times.


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