Vote for my Session at Oracle Mix!
Posted by: Brent Martin in Enterprise RSS on Jun 12, 2008
I just suggested the session I'd like to present at Open World on Oracle Mix. If you're interested in the topic, I'd certainly appreciate it if you'd head over to Oracle Mix and vote for it.
It's called "Enterprise 2.0: Publishing Content from PeopleSoft using RSS", and it builds on a concept I came up with back in 2005/2006 but the market just wasn't ready (yes I'm a real visionary that way). According to Forrester , Enterprise 2.0 projects are starting to catch on, and delivering PeopleSoft content via secure RSS feeds seems like a natural fit to me.
Anyway here's my write-up:
I appreciate your vote, and thanks for your support!According to Forrester, “Enterprise spending on Web 2.0 technologies will grow strongly over the next five years, reaching $4.6 billion globally by 2013, with social networking, mashups, and RSS capturing the greatest share.” Much of the content to make Web 2.0 hum is locked away in your HCM, CRM, and FSCM applications.
This session will demonstrate how to use existing PeopleTools technology to turn your PeopleSoft information into RSS feeds, how to leverage PeopleSoft’s robust security model control access, and how to combine the RSS feeds with other RSS content to enhance communication and collaboration across the enterprise.
During the presentation I’ll demonstrate how to publish PeopleSoft Reports and Worklist entries via RSS by leveraging PeopleCode and iScripts. I'll show how to customize the content according to the user’s access and present a couple of options for bypassing the sign in page so that they’ll work with a feed reader. Finally I'll demonstrate how to use the feeds in commonly available feed readers and in collaborative applications like Sharepoint 2007.
Update: The submission and voting deadlines for OpenWorld 2008 sessions have been extended. Submissions must now be received by June 30, and voting now ends July 13.


I think you will find that this type of a solution will work much better with a managed feed environment where the feeds can can be centrally pushed or administered based on directory structures etc. You would also have other capabilities like republishing the content or triggering other workflows from the RSS.