My view on microformats are that they are used to describe 'my stuff' or 'my opinions about stuff'. Documents coded with microformats are managed by people and there is just enough balance between user experience needs and automation that some amount of interchange is possible. For a product microformat, I would imaging that it's up to some other system to intelligently index and merge all those documents into a global product authority database. That database might be exposed via a more strict product data format than a microformat, since it isn't directly managed by people.
The different use cases I can think of are - I only know about one product - I don't care about other products - I don't know the identifying characteristics of other products - I want my product to be a unique product to avoid competition/comparisons - Its too much work to figure out which particular product my product is equivalent to - My idea of equivalence isn't compatible with other peoples (is a paperback copy the same as a hardback copy of the same novel?) (semantic equivalence - like beauty - is in the eye of the beholder) _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss
