I suggest writing a server to fetch, geocode and cache the results.

When your Javascript needs the data, instead of asking a simple proxy 
server to fetch it from the remote location, it asks your cacheing 
server for the data.

Because the geocoding is slow, your cacheing server replies immediately 
with the data that it currently has in its cache, and then reads the 
external RSS feed to see if the feed has changed from the cached 
version.

If the feed has changed, then your server sets about geocoding the 
entries. When that's finished, it stores the data plus geocode results 
in its cache.

-- 
Mike Williams
Gentleman of Leisure

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