On Feb 8, 2007, at 2:23 PM, David Janes wrote:
On 2/8/07, Scott Reynen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So as I understand that, the rules for getting the most authoritative
hCard for a given URL are:
1) parse hCard at current URL
2) If the hCard includes , load the URL in the
href, and return to st
On Feb 8, 2007, at 4:29 PM, David Janes wrote:
That the authoritative hCard is the
one that _doesn't_ have a UID, i.e. potentially has less information
than a fragment hCard?!
I think this is how authority generally works in practice, from
external references.
Here's one potential usage s
On 2/8/07, David Janes <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 2/8/07, Scott Reynen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> So as I understand that, the rules for getting the most authoritative
> hCard for a given URL are:
>
> 1) parse hCard at current URL
> 2) If the hCard includes , load the URL in the
> href, and
On 2/8/07, Scott Reynen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
So as I understand that, the rules for getting the most authoritative
hCard for a given URL are:
1) parse hCard at current URL
2) If the hCard includes , load the URL in the
href, and return to step 1.
When the consumer gets to http://theryank
On Feb 8, 2007, at 2:00 PM, David Janes wrote:
No no no. I'm looking for the set of rules a consumer has to follow to
get from Ryan's hCard on microformats.org to his authoritative hCard
at *the*ryanking/contact.
I thought Ryan already answer that:
On Feb 7, 2007, at 4:34 PM, Ryan King wrote: