%HEADLINES{"..."}%
| Parameter | Explanation | Default |
|---|---|---|
"..." | source of RSS feed; this can be an url (starting with http) or a web.topic location for internal feeds | None; is required |
href="..." | (Alternative to above) | N/A |
refresh="60" | Refresh rate in minutes for caching feed; "0" for no caching | Global REFRESH setting |
limit="12" | Maximum number of items shown | Global LIMIT setting |
header | Header. Can include these variables: - $channeltitle, $title: title of channel (channel.title) - $channellink, $link: link of channel (channel.link) - $channeldescription, $description: description (channel.description) - $channeldate, $date: publication date of the channel (channel.pubDate) - $rights: copyrights of the channel (channel.copyright) - $imagetitle: title text for site (image.title) - $imagelink: link for site (image.link) - $imageurl: URL of image (image.url) - $imagedescription: description of image (image.description) | Global HEADER setting |
format | Format of one item. Can include these variables: - $title: news item title (item.title) - $link: news item link (item.link) - $description: news item description (item.description) - $date: the publication date (item.pubDate, item.date) - $category: the article category (item.category) | Global FORMAT setting |
header and format parameters might also use variables rendering the dc, image and
content namespace information. Note, that only bits of interest have been implemented
so far and those namespaces might not be implemented fully yet.
dc namespace dc namespace info,
that could be used in header and format. Nnote, that some of the variables are
already used above. This is done by purpose to use different feeds with the
same formating parameters. If there's a conflict the non-dc tags have higher precedence,
i.e. a <title> content </title> is prefered over
<dc:title> content </dc:title> . image namespace image:item is converted into an <img> tag using the following mappings: src: image url (rdf:about attribute of the image.item tag)
alt: image title (title)
width: image width (image:width)
height: image height image:height)
content namespace
%HEADLINES{"http://slashdot.org/slashdot.rdf"
header="*[[$link][$title]]:* $description"
format="$t* [[$link][$title]]"
}%
to get the latest Slashdot news as a bullet list format:
%HEADLINES{"http://www.business-opportunities.biz/feed" limit="3"}%
to get the latest postings on the "Business Opportunities" weblog:
In the fall of 1972, when David Galenson was a senior economics major at Harvard, he took what he describes as a ''gut'' course in 17th-century Dutch art. On the first day of class, the professor displayed a stunning image of a Renaissance Madonna and child. ''Pablo Picasso did this copy of a Raphael drawing when he was 17 years old,'' the professor told the students. ''What have you people done lately?''
It's a question we all ask ourselves. What have we done lately? It rattles us each birthday. It surfaces whenever an upstart twentysomething pens a game-changing novel or a 30-year-old tech entrepreneur becomes a billionaire.
The question nagged at Galenson for years. In graduate school, he watched brash colleagues write dissertations that earned them quick acclaim and instant tenure, while he sat in the library meticulously tabulating 17th- and 18th-century indentured-servitude records.
Now, however, Galenson might have done something at last, something that could provide hope for legions of late bloomers everywhere. Beavering away in his sunny second-floor office on campus, he has scoured the records of art auctions, counted entries in poetry anthologies, tallied images in art history textbooks - and then sliced and diced the numbers with his econometric ginsu knife. Applying the fiercely analytic, quantitative tools of modern economics, he has reverse engineered ingenuity to reveal the source code of the creative mind.
What he has found is that genius - whether in art or architecture or even business - is not the sole province of 17-year-old Picassos and 22-year-old Andreessens. Instead, it comes in two very different forms, embodied by two very different types of people.
''Conceptual innovators,'' as Galenson calls them, make bold, dramatic leaps in their disciplines. They do their breakthrough work when they are young. Think Edvard Munch, Herman Melville, and Orson Welles. They make the rest of us feel like also-rans.
Then there's a second character type, someone who's just as significant but trudging by comparison. Galenson calls this group ''experimental innovators.'' Geniuses like Auguste Rodin, Mark Twain, and Alfred Hitchcock proceed by a lifetime of trial and error and thus do their important work much later in their careers. Galenson maintains that this duality - conceptualists are from Mars, experimentalists are from Venus - is the core of the creative process. And it applies to virtually every field of intellectual endeavor, from painters and poets to economists.
Read more.
Photo by sfjalar.
With the economy struggling, every business is trying to cut costs to make ends meet. Small businesses, which have fewer resources, especially feel the burn.
Not to fear. We've come up with a mega-list of ways to trim the fat off your enterprise so you don't become a casualty of the latest economic downturn.
• Switch to open-source software
• Reduce your variable expenses.
• Take advantage of member rewards.
• Communicate on online forums and message boards.
• Re-evaluate your insurance coverage and policy costs.
• Shop for discounted fares online.
• Get an “executive suite.” You don’t have to run your office full-time from an executive suite to benefit from its services. Many home-based entrepreneurs find executive suites meet a range of needs, including access to a private mailbox and a receptionist to answer or forward calls to your home office.
For 71 More Ways for Your Small Business to Save Money in this Economy,go here.
Photo by ShellyS.
As the economic crisis grows, Americans are paying less attention to new product launches, posing a serious challenge for emerging businesses, according to a recent survey.
Of 1,000 consumers polled in September, 69 percent could not recall a single product launch this year. About 22 percent said they remembered when the Wii Fit hit the market, while 16 percent remembered the iPod Touch.
The survey was conducted by Mintel International and IRI, two research firms based in Chicago, along with Schneider Associates, a Boston PR firm.
Lynn Dornblaser, Mintel’s trend insight director, blamed the decline in interest on the souring economy.
Photo by PieterMusterd.
%<plugin>_<setting>%, for example, %HEADLINES_SHORTDESCRIPTION%
0, default: 60 100 getUrl() method, Default: yes 20
* Set HEADER = <div class="headlinesChannel"><div class="headlinesLogo"><img src="$imageurl" alt="$imagetitle" border="0" />%BR%</div><div class="headlinesTitle">$n---+!! <a href="$link">$title</a></div><div class="headlinesDate">$date</div><div class="headlinesDescription">$description</div><div class="headlinesRight">$rights</div></div>
* Set FORMAT = <div class="headlinesArticle"><div class="headlinesTitle"><a href="$link">$title</a></div>$n<span class="headlinesDate">$date</span> <span class="headlinesCreator"> $creator</span> <span class="headlinesSubject"> $subject </span>$n<div class="headlinesText"> $description</div></div>
| File: | Description: |
|---|---|
data/TWiki/HeadlinesPlugin.txt | plugin topic |
pub/TWiki/HeadlinesPlugin/style.css | default css |
lib/TWiki/HeadlinesPlugin.pm | plugin perl module |
lib/TWiki/HeadlinesPlugin/Core.pm | plugin core |
HeadlinesPlugin_installer.pl to automatically check and install other TWiki modules that this module depends on. You can also do this step manually.
| Name | Version | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Digest::MD5 | >=2.33 | Required. Download from CPAN:Digest::MD5 |
| LWP::UserAgent | >=5.803 | Optional. Download from CPAN:LWP::UserAgent |
| Plugin Author: | TWiki:Main.PeterThoeny, TWiki:Main.MichaelDaum |
| Copyright ©: | 2002-2006, Peter Thoeny; 2005-2006, Michael Daum |
| License: | GPL (GNU General Public License) |
| Plugin Version: | v2.11 |
| Change History: | |
| 23 Jul 2006: | improved atom parser; if a posting has no title default to 'Untitled' |
| 26 Apr 2006: | added lazy compilation |
| 10 Feb 2006: | packaged using the TWiki:Plugins/BuildContrib; minor fixes |
| 03 Feb 2006: | off-by-one: limit="n" returned n+1 articles; make FORMAT and HEADER format strings more robust |
| 23 Jan 2006: | released v2.00 |
| 05 Dec 2005: | internal feed urls must be absolute |
| 02 Dec 2005: | added web.topic shorthand for internal feeds |
| 29 Nov 2005: | fixed CDATA handling |
| 21 Nov 2005: | added ATOM support; extended RSS support; added dublin core support; added content support; optionally using LWP to fetch feeds to follow redirections; corrected CPAN dependencies ; recoding special chars from html integer to entity encoding to increase browser compatibility; added css support; use getWorkArea() if available |
| 11 May 2005: | TWiki:Main.WillNorris: added DevelopBranch compatability |
| 31 Oct 2004: | Fixed taint issue by TWiki:Main.AdrianWeiler; small performance improvement |
| 29 Oct 2004: | Fixed issue of external caching if mod_perl or SpeedyCGI is used |
| 02 Aug 2002: | Implemented caching of feeds, thanks to TWiki:Main/RobDuarte |
| 11 Jun 2002: | Initial version (V1.000) |
| Perl Version: | 5.8 |
| TWiki:Plugins/Benchmark: | GoodStyle 100%, FormattedSearch 99.5%, HeadlinesPlugin 94% |
| Plugin Home: | TWiki:Plugins/HeadlinesPlugin |
| Feedback: | TWiki:Plugins/HeadlinesPluginDev |
| Appraisal: | TWiki:Plugins/HeadlinesPluginAppraisal |
Show attachments
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| I | Attachment | Action | Size | Date | Who | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | style.css | manage | 1.3 K | 23 Jul 2006 - 19:20 | TWikiAdminGroup | Saved by install script |