Hmm. Sounds like a case for <blockquote cite="%url%"> or <cite>....
However, it would be interesting to do something like <a href="%url%" rel="trackback">xyz</a>... I didn't realize that the <cite> tag is basically worthless when it comes to inline citations to an external source... does this mean that one should always use blockquote and just style it to be inline? FYI, when you drop content into the Flock editor from another webpage, we properly add the <blockquote> tag with a citation to the original URL. If you parsed a page with such markup, you could theoretically infer trackback, n'est-ce pas? Chris On 12/1/05, Manuel González Noriega <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, excuse me if this particular base is already covered. > > do you see the need for a microformat that would easily expose the > trackbacks received by a given resource? > > For example, I could parse a blog post, discover who's trackbacking > and do it all over again recursively, discovering 'chains' of related > posts. > > > > -- > Manuel > a veces :) a veces :( > pero siempre trabajando duro para Simplelógica: apariencia, > experiencia y comunicación en la web. > http://simplelogica.net # (+34) 985 22 12 65 > > ¡Ah! y escribiendo en Logicola: http://logicola.simplelogica.net > _______________________________________________ > microformats-discuss mailing list > [email protected] > http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss > _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss
