- From: Mark Birbeck <mark.birbeck@webbackplane.com>
- Date: Mon, 9 Feb 2009 09:06:14 +0000
- To: Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com>
- Cc: RDFa mailing list <public-rdf-in-xhtml-tf@w3.org>, RDFa Community <public-rdfa@w3.org>
Hi Manu, I didn't know that you were doing this until the 'tweets' started passing by on Twitter, and then I practically got a 'live' commentary. :) All the comments I saw from people attending your session were very positive, and this is a great summary, too. Regards, Mark On Mon, Feb 9, 2009 at 4:10 AM, Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com> wrote: > > Hi all, > > I had the pleasure of teaching a 4 hour workshop on RDFa and giving a > high-level talk on RDFa and the semantic web at this year's Web > Directions North[1] conference. I'll post the presentation material > later in the month. > > If none of you have been to a Web Directions conference before, you > should try going if there is one near you - it was absolutely fantastic > - very non-corporate, great topics, fantastically organized. Lots of > webheads from W3C, Opera, IE, Google, Yahoo, and others that are heavily > involved in using standards to build the next generation web. > > What follows is some feedback that I got from the workshop and talk on > RDFa. Conference attendees were primarily a mix of web designers and > developers. I take no position on any of the feedback, just relaying it > so that others on the list can comment. > > The Workshop > ------------ > > Most everyone that attended the workshop was familiar with Microformats, > were using them in their website, and wanted to learn more about RDFa. > All of them seemed to understand RDFa, CURIEs, namespaces, chaining, > bnodes, hanging @rels, etc. by the end of the workshop. Having not known > anything about RDF and RDF/XML when starting the workshop, they seemed > to leave with a fairly solid understanding of RDFa. > > XHTML and HTML5 > --------------- > > While many people were using XHTML1 in their demos to perform markup, > there were many more designers and web developers that thought that > HTML5 was the next version of (X)HTML. There was a great deal of buzz > around HTML5 and nobody that I spoke to mentioned that they were in the > least bit excited about XHTML2, even when asked directly. HTML5 was > mentioned in presentations and conversations throughout the week. The > general feeling was that HTML5 was far more exciting than XHTML2. > > Most seemed to hate the term "RDFa" > ----------------------------------- > > Many confused RDFa with RDF/XML and even more confused RDF/XML with RDF. > Web developer understanding surrounding the differences between RDF, > RDF/XML and RDFa are a mess. People got it after the talk, but several > made the suggestion that we re-brand RDFa because "it's different from > RDF and there are really bad connotations associated with RDF". "It > sounds way too technical." were some of the other comments - it really > scared web designers. They also didn't like the W3C semantic web icon > and seemed to feel the same about the W3C site in general, several > mentioned that they "felt like I was looking at a website from the late > 1990s" (note that most of the negative comments came from web designers). > > RDFa Website and Blog > --------------------- > > There were many comments about how the Microformats website looked far > more professional and was far more useful at presenting information than > the RDFa blog and wiki. There were several complaints about it being > nearly useless and universally scary for web designers that are just > starting out with web semantics. > > RDFa Wizards and Templates > -------------------------- > > "It would be really nice if I could just go to a site and start filling > out a form to generate RDFa for people/places/events/etc.". This was > repeated on every day of the conference - we've been talking about it > for some time, but have not gotten it done yet. Seems to be a great need > for this. > > Namespaces weren't an issue > --------------------------- > > I made it a point to ask people directly if the xmlns:foaf=XYZ prefixing > mechanism scared or confused them and not a single person said that it > did. Most seemed to feel as if it were a fairly normal mechanism to > define a prefix. Granted, they didn't know the alternatives, but not > once did I have an argument about why we have namespaces in RDFa. That > being said, most said that they understood why we have namespaces... > BUT, having no namespaces was easier to understand. Most seemed to > understand the vocabulary scaling problem inherent with Microformats. > > SVG + RDFa > ---------- > > Doug Schepers worked RDFa into his SVG presentation, using it to > describe people in an image such as "pretty", "tubby", "skinny", "bald". > He wanted the ability to tag areas of an image and attach semantic > attributes or descriptions to the image. This has some fairly powerful > implications for people with disabilities, such as the ability to mark > up areas on a graphical map as "water", or "land", or "forest", or "bus > stop", etc. using RDFa. A thermal printer would take this data and then > add physical semantics to the map that is printed out based on the > semantics (braille, water texture, etc.) > > Overall the feedback on RDFa was very positive and many stated that they > were going to go back and try messing around with it a bit more. > > -- manu > > [1] http://north.webdirections.org/ > > -- > Manu Sporny > President/CEO - Digital Bazaar, Inc. > > -- Mark Birbeck, webBackplane mark.birbeck@webBackplane.com http://webBackplane.com/mark-birbeck webBackplane is a trading name of Backplane Ltd. (company number 05972288, registered office: 2nd Floor, 69/85 Tabernacle Street, London, EC2A 4RR)
Received on Monday, 9 February 2009 09:06:53 UTC