Information and Content Exchange
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Information and Content Exchange (ICE) is an XML-based protocol used for content syndication via the Internet. By using XML both sender and receiver have an agreed-upon language in which to communicate. The system uses a Client-Server architecture.
On October 27, 1998 the completion of ICE 1.0 was announced at a press summit in San Francisco. In June 2004, a new, Web Services compliant version, ICE 2.0 was released to support industrial strength syndication for the next generation of the Web.
Content management is usually built into the ICE server.
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[edit] Implementations
TwICE is a Java implementation of ICE 2.0. Rice is a Ruby implementation of ICE 1.1. Both TwICE and Rice are developed and maintained by Jim Menard.
ICEcubes is the original Java reference implementation of ICE 1.1, although it has not been actively maintained since December, 2000.
[edit] Uses
[edit] Development
The development of ICE is open and is not meant to be proprietary.