On Oct 30, 2006, at 3:20 AM, Stephen Paul Weber wrote:

Well, as I did when we first spoke months ago, I firmly disagree, and
over time, I think you will be proven wrong. There's simply no point
in having multiple instantiations of the same data in a text-based
format (I'm exempting relational databases).


I agree.  Universal formats are very useful, and if uF is being used
by one aspect of the program, why not by all?  I currently use XOXO to
backup my reading list / transfer it to other feed readers.  Why
should this not be able to apply across the board to all microformats?
It may not be part of 80% or initial-draft use cases, but if it
starts happening, I'll be all for it.

Currently, I can't name a single IM client that uses semanticful HTML for logging. In fact, there's been a trend *away* from HTML lately. Microformats are supposed to represent what exists in the wild, no? Whatever the validity of Chris's points about redundancy or future directions, isn't the idea that uFs are supposed to represent what's in the wild overriding?

More and more applications are using HTML for display, and less and less are using it for storage. In fact, Adium was quite close to using SQLite (a relational database) for it's log format -- and probably would have if not for the braindead implementation of Apple's Spotlight code (that's a whole different story).

I appreciate that there may be an (obvious) initial bias on this list to using microformats to solve a problem, and that in the outside community, there may be a bit of a bias as to *not* using microformats to solve a problem. This is totally expected. In either case, I'm as much here to be convinced as I am to convince people. So I welcome people to comment on these emails, even if you feel like you're not saying much more than "I agree."

-Colin
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