I've been working on a big HTTP client verb, that does all the things you'd ever want to do via HTTP. #
This is a first release. It will get more features over time. And there will be breakage, that's why I'm putting the thread to discuss this on the RFC site. #
I want feedback, and reserve the right to make breaking changes as is made very clear on the DocServer page. #
I'm most hopeful wrt LogSeq. But eventually we will have lots of databases (imho) that work well with OPML. #
And I think even would-be-dominant products like Roam will want to open up, rather than be left out of the party. #
PS: An important point I don't want anyone to miss -- #
You can have OPML in JSON. We have a toolkit that reads OPML files and returns JavaScript structures. From there, do whatever you want. Save it as JSON. It's up to you. I wouldn't have left this stone un-turned-over, so before assuming something like that doesn't exist, ask.#
I've been working on a big HTTP client verb, that does all the things you'd ever want to do via HTTP. #
This is a first release. It will get more features over time. And there will be breakage, that's why I'm putting the thread to discuss this on the RFC site. #
I want feedback, and reserve the right to make breaking changes as is made very clear on the DocServer page. #
I'm most hopeful wrt LogSeq. But eventually we will have lots of databases (imho) that work well with OPML. #
And I think even would-be-dominant products like Roam will want to open up, rather than be left out of the party. #
PS: An important point I don't want anyone to miss -- #
You can have OPML in JSON. We have a toolkit that reads OPML files and returns JavaScript structures. From there, do whatever you want. Save it as JSON. It's up to you. I wouldn't have left this stone un-turned-over, so before assuming something like that doesn't exist, ask.#
Copyright 2021, Dave Winer.
Last update: Friday November 5, 2021; 11:35 PM EDT.