I just love the first two principles of microformats:
* Solve a specific problem
* Simple as possible
I do believe that they are strongly inter-related. If you nail the problem to its specifics, the solution is bound to be simple.
What are Microformats?
Microformats are changing the web, and how your computer goes about finding things you ask for online. By standardizing chunks of data - events, business cards, listings, even recipes, Microformats create a more structured internet.
Photo credit: (c) Jon Tan
The upshot of this well-tagged, structured web is that when you want to find something - be it a hotel close to Oxford Street, London or an eBay merchant with great customer feedback, Microformats lend your search engine or aggregator a helping hand.
Why Microformats?
Microformats are small and inobtrusive, hence the name, and play nicely with the existing code that holds the internet together. By adding little snippets of standardized information to blog posts, address book entries, or anything else published online they make finding and sorting that data a whole lot easier.
Suddenly, instead of google turning up hotels in 'Oxford Street', New Jersey or guitar amplifiers that crank out 'great feedback', the better informed semantic web cuts through to what you're really looking for. And it does that in part thanks to Microformats.
How?
At the heart of the semantic web is the creation of standards - universal means of pulling the important parts out of the web and delivering them to your desktop. One key idea in the world of standards is the Uniform Resource Idenfifier (or URI).
Put simply, a URI a way of uniquely identifying a person, a business, a building or even an idea in such a way that it can be linked to, aggregated and mined for information. Every time that uniquely identified item is mentioned in a blog, advertised on Craig's List, or reviewed in an online magazine, the same identifier is applied. Think of it as a de.licio.us tag or blog category recognized across the entire web.
Microformats are one way of creating these universally recognized standards. In his Microformats From the Ground Up presentation, Ryan King of Technorati lists the principles behind Microformats. They are:
Photo credit: Luis Francisco Cordero
To date the list of Microformats being put to use online includes:
You can make your own hCard today with Microformats.org's hCard creator.
You can create your own hCalendar events at the hCalendar Creator.
You can create your own hReview using the hReview Creator.
More
You can also use Microformats to:
The future
Making the web an easier place to search, find and aggregate information is the concern of several developers, the Microformats group among them. While the semantic web is still very much a work in progress, we can expect to see a continuous growth in applications and interfaces that take advantage of these useful fragments of standardized information.
At the moment you can scour the web for microformatted data using Technorati's Microformats Search, and Yahoo has adopted several Microformats for its local business listings, Microformats are growing exponentially.
In the next few years, expect to see them invisibly integrated into your everyday web surfing and publishing activities ensuring that the right content finds its way onto the screens of the right people.
Elsewhere on the web
*Technorati's microformats search engine
*A Microformats Primer from digital-web magazine (http://www.digital-web.com/)
*The home of the Microformats group
*Microformats - what the hell are they and why should I care?
*A concise summary of Microformats
*Plazes, dodgeball and Enterprise Microformats
Michael Pick -2006-09-20 03:44:48 |
I just love the first two principles of microformats:
* Solve a specific problem
* Simple as possibleI do believe that they are strongly inter-related. If you nail the problem to its specifics, the solution is bound to be simple.