- From: Danny Ayers <danny.ayers@gmail.com>
- Date: Mon, 22 Aug 2005 19:20:59 +0200
- To: Microformats Discuss <microformats-discuss@microformats.org>
- Cc: public-rdf-in-xhtml-tf@w3.org
On 8/21/05, Bud Gibson <bud@thecommunityengine.com> wrote: > I have to confess that most of this flew over my head. What I think > you are saying is something like this. > > "While microformats are not optimized for machine validation out of > the box, we might be able to get around that by associating them with > some parallel ontology constructions that are more amenable to > automated processing. Then, by analogy with these parallel > constructions, we could determine whether the page author was using > microformat components consistent with their semantics." Yes, very nicely put. > Sounds like a worthy goal, but I wonder if you might not achieve a > similar end by dropping the middleman (RDF/OWL?) and writing the XSLT > rules (or some imperative equivalent) directly. Perhaps, but I've no idea where you would start ;-) RDF+OWL offers a common model in which quite a range of semantics can be expressed, it can be mapped in a straightforward fashion from microformat data and data can be mixed from different sources without breaking the model. It would be a bit > more ad hoc, but as you mention we don't have the RDF for most > microformats and the machinery for the processing is not there yet. Ah, sorry - I meant to say there *is* quite a lot of the RDF that would be needed available already, and the machinery is available off the shelf . Some of the XSLT from microformat to RDF/XML is still lacking, as are the little bits of glue code. I want to use microformat data within RDF systems myself so may well end up filling in the blanks myself - but at the rate I've been going chances are someone else will have done these bits first - hopefully ;-) Cheers, Danny. -- http://dannyayers.com
Received on Monday, 22 August 2005 17:22:20 UTC