The tech yahoo site represents excellently the two types of product sellers. The affiliates and merchants.
While hListing is ok, it's not very adaptable at the minute and is a smaller microformat in comparison. The citation MF looks great, although difficult to implement with the ideas of hProduct bordering on many of the same elements. I'm not sure how to work with that. For example, you're selling a bibliography on your online store. The citation format covers many great details like this: <p id="Brenner2000a" class="bibref"> <span class="creator">Brenner, N.</span> <span class="date"> (<span class="year">2000</span>) </span> <span class="title">The Urban Question as a Scale Question: Reflections on Henri Lefebre, Urban Theory and the Politics of Scale, </span> <span class="container"> <span class="title">International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, </span> <span class="volume">24</span> <span class="issue">(2)</span> <span class="locator">, pp. 361-78</span> </span>. </p> To implement with hProduct ideas, I'm not sure how you'd go about doing it. And what about things like Electronics? What details are important? Maybe in 10 years time a new technology specification would appear that would be important, but isn't so now. For example, power ratings might become highly important (or required by law). I can see this being a huge stepping stone to cross with 'hProduct' and 'citation' integration. However, I feel the concepts behind hProduct will make it a popular microformat and excellent for a more Symantec web. Adam _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list microformats-discuss@microformats.org http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss