oops. that was supposed to go to kevin marks :-)
lisa
hey you,
great seeing you at the cc salon last week.
what's raj's email at the archive again? is it just raj@ or something.
really really (really) need that updated compression info we were
discussing.
thanks!!!
lisa
Let me post a concrete example in this arena, and maybe someone can
come up with some suggestions.
Let's say your company has an internal version of delicious.
The URLs look like this:
http://dogear.example.com/html?tag=collaboration
How do you tag this using rel tag?
If one of the
On Mon, February 26, 2007 11:53 am, Mike Kaply wrote:
... please don't say use an external tagspace The tag might be
an internal only product or a codename, so the tagspace belongs
inside the company.
This actually relates to an issue I've been dealing with.
I have a bunch of places where I
On Feb 26, 2007, at 12:13 PM, Angus McIntyre wrote:
On Mon, February 26, 2007 11:53 am, Mike Kaply wrote:
... please don't say use an external tagspace The tag might be
an internal only product or a codename, so the tagspace belongs
inside the company.
This actually relates to an issue I've
On Feb 24, 2007, at 9:41 AM, Mike Kaply wrote:
Was there a reason in the original creation of rel-tag that no one
thought to allow title to specify the tagname?
Yes, the idea was to make it more resilient against gaming by
requiring the URL to embody the tag. This followed existing
Edward O'Connor wrote:
James Craig wrote:
Requiring a restful URL for rel-tag (though the ideal solution) is
expecting a lot more of a µf author than requiring authors to add a
bit of markup.
While properly implementing a tag space may be slightly more
difficult[1] than other methods for