Microformats. Hresume - Microformats. This document represents a draft microformat specification. Although drafts are somewhat mature in the development process, the stability of this document cannot be guaranteed, and implementers should be prepared to keep abreast of future developments and changes. Watch this wiki page, or follow discussions on the #microformats Freenode IRC channel to stay up-to-date. hResume is a microformat for publishing resumes and CVs. hResume is one of several open microformat standards suitable for embedding in HTML, XHTML, Atom, RSS, and arbitrary XML. Want to get started with writing an hResume?
Use the hResume Creator to create your hResume and publish it, or follow the hResume authoring tips to add hResume markup to your web page or blog. Microformats Draft Specification Editors Tantek Çelik and Glenn Jones Previous Editor & Author Ryan King Acknowledgments See acknowledgments. Microformats copyright and patents statements apply. Status Draft, version 0.1. Introduction Semantic XHTML Design Principles. XFN - XHTML Friends Network. XFN™ (XHTML Friends Network) is a simple way to represent human relationships using hyperlinks. In recent years, blogs and blogrolls have become the fastest growing area of the Web. XFN enables web authors to indicate their relationship(s) to the people in their blogrolls simply by adding a 'rel' attribute to their <a href> tags, e.g. <a href=" rel="friend met">... To find out how to write and use XFN, or to write a program to generate or spider it, read the following sections: Introduction and Examples Introduction to XFN, examples, styling suggestions, and future potential.
Getting Started Join the XHTML Friends Network in just four easy steps! Profile Version 1.1 of the XFN meta data profile: the list of the values used in XFN with their significance. Background The thinking that went into the design of XFN, why particular values were chosen, and why other values were left out. Frequently asked questions about XFN. XFN Tools XFN and ... What's out there?
How can I help? Press. Don’t Forget to Plant It! » Tails Scripts. The open, social web. I was in Europe for the past week and half, ending up in Leuven, Belgium to speak at the Twiist.be conference. The topic of my talk was “The Open, Social Web.” (PDF) At first I struggled to develop a compelling or sensible narrative for the talk — as there is so much to it that I could probably give a dozen or more 45 minutes talks on the subject.
With some long-distance encouragement from Brynn, I eventually arrived at the topic I wanted to cover that lead to a conclusion that has largely been implicit in my work so far. My first priority was to establish that Web 2.0 is not only still the defining paradigm of this period, but that its core assertions are only now beginning to be realized and that much work still remains. Indeed, Tim O’Reilly’s original intention with “Web 2.0” was to encourage open source developers to begin to see the web as a platform — and to move beyond “the page metaphor of Web 1.0 to deliver rich user experiences.” Consider this progression: What’s your address? Solving the social network problem.