BlogHer07 Presentation available online

Skye Kilaen and I presented a program at BlogHer07 that is available for download from Skye’s site at All Access Blogging. It’s a large file in the original PowerPoint, so it’s a big download. Slides and speakers’ notes are both available.

Skye talked about checking your blog for accessibility. I talked about checking your blog for mobile devices. I also talked about microformats. The three were bunched together under a heading of “Web Standards” for the BlogHers.

About the BlogHer conference in general, it is highly successful with over 800 bloggers in attendance in person and many more taking part on Second Life. The keynotes and breakout sessions are very well done and it’s turning out to be a very successful conference. See my photos on Flickr.

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Review: Microformats: Empowering Your Markup for Web 2.0

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Why hReview, the Microformat, Rocks!

I’ve been writing book reviews on this blog since the very beginning. It fact, the reason I started the blog in the first place was so I could write reviews of the books available for teaching web design.

Recently I’ve been playing with the hReview creator that automatically generates the code for the microformat hReview. The first time I tried it, I used it as is, with no modifications. I didn’t like the way it handled the image, though. So I modified the code the hReview creator gave me a bit and tried it again. The second time I was much happier with the appearance, it fit in better with my usual style of writing book reviews for this blog and the image was where I wanted it.

My main question was whether the modified hReview code would be recognized as readily as the unmodified version. I tested this by searching Google for reviews of the two books I’d used hReview to format. I was amazed to see that my reviews, in either the modified or unmodified format, both place very high in the Google rankings. Since other book reviews I have written do not come in to the Google search results at such a prominent spot, I think the hReview microformat must deserve some credit for my good search results. My conclusion? hReview rocks!

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Three Microformat Creators

Microformats.org has three wizards that will generate the code for a microformat for you. Very easy to use. Try them: hCard Creator, hCalendar Creator, and hReview Creator.

ADDENDUM: I thought I’d give one of the microformat creators a try. Here’s the code it generated for me as an hReview.

Oct 29, 2006 by

Virginia DeBolt


photo of 'CSS Site Design'

★★★★★ A collaboration between the CSS guru Eric Meyer and the training movie queen Lynda Weinmann. It’s all on CD so the price tag is a little high, but the movies let you learn all about CSS layouts from the master

This
hReview brought to you by the
hReview Creator.

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Why Microformats have the Potential to be a Big Deal

I’ve pointed to a number of resources on microformats in these pages. They were all written to explain how to create some particular microformat. Now there’s an article by John Allsop that not only tells you how to do it but gives a very clear explanation as to why microformats are a needed standard addition to HTML. Vitamin: Add microformats magic to your site Allsopp said, Often they [web pages] contain very similar information – from mundane things like contact details for individuals and organizations, to reviews of films, restaurants, books, to opinions about what’s worth reading online. Yet aggregating all those contacts details to create a distributed Yellow pages-like service, or those opinions about restaurants, books, films, gadgets to create decentralized versions of IMDB reviews, or Amazon books reviews, or Zagats, is very hard, because there are no standardized formats on the web for contact details, or reviews, and many many other kinds of commonly published information. The wisdom of the web, the collective opinions and attitudes expressed there are largely inaccessible, because software isn’t smart enough to recognize it.

ADDENDUM: Another article on the same topic by John Allsop is also in the latest Digital Web Magazine. Same topic, different article. Read both.

New Microformats in Education Wiki

This Wiki from the University of Waterloo aims to explore whether there is a need for education specific microformats and how microformats are being used in education: Main Page – Uwebd

Currently the Wiki is open to all.

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