On 28/02/07, Angus McIntyre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
To expand briefly on (b) above, imagine a naive developer who has
heard about the wonderful new microformat hThing. They find a Thing
marked with the class=hThing, open it up in a text editor and say
Ah, so that's how it's done.. They then
On 2/27/07, Angus McIntyre [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
At 18:57 -0600 27.02.2007, Scott Reynen wrote:
On Feb 27, 2007, at 5:15 PM, Angus McIntyre wrote:
We're trying to model publishing behaviors, not change them and
certainly not restrict them. If someone publishes something that
doesn't match a
On Feb 27, 2007, at 9:43 PM, Angus McIntyre wrote:
I think I started off slightly on the wrong foot, because I wrongly
assumed that hRelease was something that had already been raised in
this community. In fact, it appears to have emerged at http://
www.socialtext.net/hRelease without ever
I've been looking at this [1][2] and I think ... maybe ... that
there's something missing. Are not microformats something that is
created by the microformats process?
The reason I ask is that someone's announced hRelease today [3]
using the microformats name and symbol.
Regards, etc...
[1]
On 2/27/07, David Janes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The reason I ask is that someone's announced hRelease today [3]
using the microformats name and symbol.
[3] http://www.psnetwork.org.nz/blog/2007/02/27/microformats-govt-release/
Reading closely, it's not an announcement of hRelease itself,
On Tue, February 27, 2007 5:45 pm, Christopher St John wrote:
On 2/27/07, David Janes [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
... someone's announced hRelease today [3]
using the microformats name and symbol.
[3]
http://www.psnetwork.org.nz/blog/2007/02/27/microformats-govt-release/
Reading closely,
At 18:57 -0600 27.02.2007, Scott Reynen wrote:
On Feb 27, 2007, at 5:15 PM, Angus McIntyre wrote:
We're trying to model publishing behaviors, not change them and
certainly not restrict them. If someone publishes something that
doesn't match a microformat standard, parsers should be able to