| Saturday, June 21, 2003 |
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The Semantic Weblog..
A first draft of my contribution to Sam Ruby's Well Formed Weblog wiki. 1 SummaryPackages of structured data are becoming post components. [PhilWolff] 2 DescriptionThe virtue of blogs has been their simplicity. Each post only needs one field, and maybe a title and url. Not everyone is served well by this lowest common denominator. Sometimes you have a burning need for more structure, at least some of the time. When you know a subject deeply, and your observations or analysis recur, you may be best served by filling in a form. The form will have its own metadata and its own data model. Consider a school soccer coach. An after game report typically includes:
Wouldn't it be handy for your blogging tool to:
News aggregators and news readers should be able to:
"The Semantic Weblog" will create a happy blend of natural, human unstructured words, pictures, sounds, and video with machine readable and highly comparable more-structured data. 3 Use Cases and Potential ApplicationsI don't want to put a cap on this. It's like saying "web pages will be used for..."3.1 Recipes and Golf ScoresYou should be able to define your own structure. The most common use of Microsoft Excel is making lists of things. No reason blogs can't give similar freedom to define a new package. Build from scratch or on the shoulders of other package definitions. Just for diversity sake:
Companies that make personal planners (filofax, Day Timer, Day Runner) sell paper forms. These help you:
This behavior should translate nicely to blogging, especially as blogging tools support faceted presentation (you see what you're intended to see). 3.2 Work related bloggingOrganizations have been using forms since the Ottoman Empire. Forms help:
And that's when people fill out forms. By having machines deliver transaction notes and reports to a blogger's news reader, you can provoke commentary about those transactions in the blog. 3.3 Interop with enterprise applicationsSo I define a "new customer bio" structure. My customer relationship management system writes RSS for me that includes new customer info. Not only can I cite that post in my blog, but:
Along the way...
4 Architecture4.1 Packages
4.2 Package Syndication
4.3 Package DiscoveryI'm thinking we could follow the example of:
4.4 Package Aggregation and Analysis4.4.1 AggregationWhy should anything be different?4.4.2 AnalysisWe now have comparable data! I subscribe to all the local soccer RSS feeds in my league. An aggregator can show trends, averages, rankings, etc.4.5 Rendering4.5.1 Edit FormDidn't Mozilla put out a protocol for defining simple UIs?4.5.2 HTMLTemplates?4.5.3 RSSRSS namespaces?5 Live Examples5.1 QloggerQlogger is a blog application and hosting service. Sub-schemas describe activities (golfing, commuting) and reviews (movies, marijuana). You can see how this creates more comparable data (show me all the movie reviews by warbloggers rated 4 out of 5 stars). Read trend charts so you can see if you golf game is getting better or getting worse, or if you commute times are better on some days.5.2 JemBlogThe Jena Semantic Web Server.Development Diary, Notes, Download, Mailing List, SourceForge. 6 Discussion* [PhilWolff] This extension may be out of scope per Sam's blog post I'll take feedback in the comments to this post or, even better, on the wiki page. [a klog apart]9:06:06 AM |
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RSS Power.
Tim Bray has been writing about RSS [1 2 3]. He gives some examples about how RSS can be leveraged for banking, sales tracking and weather, and also discusses the potential pitfalls. I have been writing for some time about how RSS could be a disruptive innovation going beyond blogs, with a specific focus on enterprise events. (See my post on Information Refinery from last July.) Thats where the focus should be. In fact, for all practical purposes, the actual weblog pages are useless for me - I only need the RSS to flow into my Info Aggregator. I don't need to access the blog pages to read what people are writing. The RSS ecosystem is going to be more important than the blogging ecosystem. Blogs will become by-products of the RSS ecosystem. Wait a while and we will make some RSS magic happen! [E M E R G I C . o r g]9:03:07 AM |