|
||||
|
June 2, 2011
Search Engines Are Going With Microdata With the launch of schema.org, Google, Yahoo, and Bing have endorsed the HTML5 Microdata format. The pragmatic, middle-ground approach of this format -- as seen in the schema.org's Type Hierarchy -- is why these companies settled on Microdata. It will ultimately lead to a wider acceptance of the semantic web, even if it is not RDFa! The UMBC eBiquity blog has a pretty good summary article. May 21, 2007
Want to Check Out RDFa in Under a Minute? If you are curious about where microformats and metadata are headed (and haven't checked out RDFa), take a look at the W3C's RDFa in Javascript page. There, you'll find the RDFa Highlight bookmarklet. Save this to your bookmarks and then run it on a page that contains RDFa such as the RDFa Calendar Test Page. View source on that to see how the content is structured into data using some simple attributes. The implications of standard, structured data that can be easily coded - and extracted - are simply huge. Imagine if, without too much additional effort, the blog entries and other kinds of simple web content that you regularly post could be easily mashed up, aggregated, or saved into local apps. To understand more, check out Elias Torres' excellent and brief write-up of his Open Data in HTML presentation at XTech 2007. March 25, 2007
Mind Map Interchange Eric Blue is looking for a standard format for mind maps: * Is the need for a new standard an accurate observation? * What needs to take place in order to make this vision happen? * Who needs to adopt this format first, and what will be the major motivators to make progress in this area? I would suggest checking out discussions concerning the intersection of topic maps and the semweb: Also, I would delve into the approaches for internal representation and storage used by Mindraider and Pragmatron. Posted by Jamie Pitts at 8:49 PM | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)July 26, 2006
Annotating with markup in wikis Danny intrigued me with a snip of SemWiki syntax. I had not realized it, but the Semantic MediaWiki project has made a lot of progress toward offering a rapid-fire means to annotate content. Take a look at Help for Annotation Markup to understand how this works in MediaWiki. Corrib.org also has some good ideas in SemWikiSyntax. |
Winnow My Bloglines Down Memecat TigerLead
The Art of Unix Programming
Eric Raymond Dave Beckett Tim Berners-Lee Tim Bray Dan Brickley Marc Canter Paul Ford Seth Ladd Seb Paquet Clay Shirky Roland Tanglao Dave Winer
Syndication: Categories
AI
Recent Entries
Archives
|
|||
| Copyright © Jamie Pitts | ||||