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<title>Post Remix</title>
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<link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/atom.xml"/>
<updated>2006-10-11T22:07:20Z</updated>

<id>tag:blog.washingtonpost.com,2007:/postremix//96</id>
<rights>Copyright (c) 2006, WashingtonPost.Newsweek Interactive</rights>

<entry>
<title>Another news map: International news on Google Maps</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2006/05/another_news_map_international.html" />
<updated>2006-10-11T22:07:20Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2006-05-23:/postremix/2006/05/another_news_map_international.html</id>
<summary type="text">Here&apos;s another news map mashup. The appropriately named News Map focuses on international news, letting you click a country to see recent news stories from that country, taken from Yahoo News. The integration with Wikipedia is a nice touch....Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashups" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Google News Cloud: Automatic tagging of news stories</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2006/05/google_news_cloud_automatic_ta.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2006-05-09:/postremix/2006/05/google_news_cloud_automatic_ta.html</id>
<summary type="text">Fernando Serboncini has created Google News Cloud, which &quot;fetches news from Google News, tries to find tags related to each news and presents a tag cloud of the daily news.&quot; This is somewhat similar to NewsCloud, which does the same for Washington Post stories....Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashups" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Mashup Camp</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2006/02/mashup_camp.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2006-02-22:/postremix/2006/02/mashup_camp.html</id>
<summary type="text"><![CDATA[I just returned from Mashup Camp, a Silicon Valley &quot;unconference&quot; that brought together mashup developers and API providers. I was happy for the chance to get the word out about Post Remix and some of the mashup-friendly data we have here at washingtonpost.com such as RSS feeds for every member of Congress. There were plenty of interesting ideas, tips and demos. Here are some highlights: Tantek Çelik led a discussion on microformats, simple ways to]]>...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashup community" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>&quot;What&apos;s up&quot;: Global news map</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2006/02/whats_up_global_news_map.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2006-02-15:/postremix/2006/02/whats_up_global_news_map.html</id>
<summary type="text"><![CDATA[Jeroen Wijering has created What's up?, &quot;an indispensable tool for the global newsjunkie.&quot; It's a Flash application that displays news stories, including those from The Washington Post, on a world map. The automatically-updated world time zones are a particularly useful -- and stylish -- touch.]]>...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashups" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Idea: Make a Post widget for the Google homepage</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/12/idea_make_a_post_widget_for_th.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-12-15:/postremix/2005/12/idea_make_a_post_widget_for_th.html</id>
<summary type="text">The other day, Google announced an API for its homepage widgets. This lets you create and distribute mini applications that sit on Google&apos;s homepage. washingtonpost.com has all sorts of content that&apos;s ripe for inclusion in a Google homepage widget (or two). A news feed, perhaps? Congressional vote data, perhaps? Got any ideas? Made any mashups? Let us know....Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Post data" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>New for mashing: Congress RSS feeds</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/12/new_for_mashing_congress_rss_f.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-12-07:/postremix/2005/12/new_for_mashing_congress_rss_f.html</id>
<summary type="text">We&apos;ve launched the U.S. Congress Votes Database, which lets you browse every vote in the U.S. Congress since 1991. One of the site&apos;s features is an RSS feed for every active member of Congress, updated each time he or she votes. There&apos;s also a feed of the latest votes. See the RSS page for full information about the feeds. Of course, this data is open to remixing, so, if you&apos;re a developer/tinkerer, feel free to...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Post data" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Post stories + Amazon.com books</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/12/post_stories_amazoncom_books.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-12-01:/postremix/2005/12/post_stories_amazoncom_books.html</id>
<summary type="text"><![CDATA[Alan Taylor, creator of Amazon Light, has integrated Amazon book selections with Washington Post news feeds to produce these pages: National news Politics World news In Alan's words, it's &quot;a listing of book titles found on Amazon.com, which are relevant to the content in the current edition of the Washington Post.&quot; It works by grabbing the appropriate washingtonpost.com RSS feeds, sending the text to Yahoo's Term Extraction service to get keywords, then searching Amazon.com for]]>...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashups" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Thanks for positive feedback</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/11/thanks_for_positive_feedback.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-11-28:/postremix/2005/11/thanks_for_positive_feedback.html</id>
<summary type="text">We&apos;ve had a lot of great feedback and blog coverage since our launch last week, despite the holiday weekend here in the U.S. Check out the coverage: Via Technorati Via IceRocket Keep the feedback coming! It was especially nice to get a welcome to the party from the BBC, which has been encouraging mashups for a while now through its BBC Backstage program. Thanks, BBC; it&apos;s good to be here....Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Meta" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Rebotcast: washingtonpost.com via audio</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/11/rebotcast_washingtonpostcom_vi.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-11-27:/postremix/2005/11/rebotcast_washingtonpostcom_vi.html</id>
<summary type="text"><![CDATA[Now, this is cool. Ted Gilchrist of Botcast Network (slogan: &quot;We do the reading so you don't have to&quot;) has hooked up a few washingtonpost.com article feeds into text-to-speech software to produce a couple of &quot;Rebotcasts&quot; -- automated audio recordings of Post stories. Here are the pages he's set up so far: Rebotcast reads Charles Krauthammer (washingtonpost.com) Rebotcast reads Michael Kinsley (washingtonpost.com) Rebotcast reads washingtonpost.com - Today's Highlights Rebotcast reads washingtonpost.com - Tech Policy Each]]>...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashups" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>NewsCloud</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/11/newscloud.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-11-27:/postremix/2005/11/newscloud.html</id>
<summary type="text">Frank Wiles&apos; News Cloud is a tag cloud interface to washingtonpost.com news stories. It automatically pulls keywords out of stories and presents a way of navigating the news by keyword. Frank made it for fun, as an experiment. Here&apos;s how it works, direct from the about page: NewsCloud is an application that takes all of the RSS feeds from the Washington Post website and builds a blog like tag cloud from the keywords. Each story&apos;s...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Mashups" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Terms of Use</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/11/terms_of_use.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-11-22:/postremix/2005/11/terms_of_use.html</id>
<summary type="text">We are pleased to announce washingtonpost.com&apos;s Post Remix. With Post Remix, you may use washingtonpost.com RSS feeds to experiment with different applications using washingtonpost.com content.Here are the conditions for participating in Post Remix: Your efforts must be for personal, and not for commercial, use. You may not sell applications that use or incorporate washingtonpost.com content. You recognize that Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive retains all intellectual property rights in all washingtonpost.com content and you that acquire no such...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Administrative" />
</entry>

<entry>
<title>Welcome to Post Remix</title>
<link rel="alternate"  type="text/html" href="http://blog.washingtonpost.com/postremix/2005/11/welcome_to_post_remix.html" />
<updated>2006-10-04T09:00:00Z</updated>
<id>tag:washingtonpost.com,2005-11-21:/postremix/2005/11/welcome_to_post_remix.html</id>
<summary type="text"><![CDATA[Welcome to washingtonpost.com's Post Remix site, affectionately known as mashingtonpost.com. This site has two goals: To spotlight the work of outside Web developers who've made cool and interesting projects (&quot;mashups&quot;) using Post content. To provide information about washingtonpost.com's various data offerings (APIs and RSS feeds). Why are we doing this? Because we want to foster innovation, and because we want to see your ideas about new ways of displaying news and information on the Web.]]>...Please click on the title to continue reading this entry.</summary>
<author>
<name></name>
</author>
<category term="Meta" />
</entry>

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