Yes - I was tempted to add such a comment, but don't know Microformats well enough yet. I'm certainly not knocking standards or modularization, but practical experience has show to me that simple can also be effective.
RSS (as an example) has remained very simple ever since it was created and XML-RPC has also remained so along with many others. Sure, there have been additions on top of RSS, but fundamentally it is easy to get your head around what is required to get started. Hence they have remained popular even longer than 5 years after being created. In contrast if you consider RDF, OWL etc - they are not particularly easy to get running with. There is quite a learning curve, but having used them for a number of years I appreciate what they can do and why the specs make them so powerful. However, there have also been a number of efforts that have disappeared off the map because of over engineering (over-modularization). The first paragraph of Uche Ogbuji's IBM article sums it up for me: http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/xml/library/x-stand2.html It's certainly nothing specific to Microformats, but more a web 2.0 view on things where simplicity is being particularly effective. Regards, Steven http://stevenR2.com -----Original Message----- From: Karl Dubost [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: 27 April 2006 11:08 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Microformats Discuss Subject: Re: [uf-discuss] Microformats vs XML Le 06-04-27 à 16:50, Steven Livingstone a écrit : > Less formal creations such as RSS never suffered from that as much > (in constrast to say NewsML which had a much more specific goal - > the XSD is around 30 pages long). Look at the contrast of something > like XML-RPC versus SOAP/WSDL and so on. The former does a nice job > for online services without too much effort - the latter can > require a LOT of work (although tool support is getting better) and > is better suited in formal environments. > > Don't get me wrong, there is sometimes a need for detailed specs > and so on, but there is also a need for simple, effective formats, > which Microformats do very well. That is called Modularization and has nothing to do with microformats but the choice of structural organization of a technology. What you said is valid for *any* specifications. Take the microformats in 5 years, add all the "modules" (hcard, hreview, ) etc. And you will have a huge specification too. -- Karl Dubost - http://www.w3.org/People/karl/ W3C Conformance Manager, QA Activity Lead QA Weblog - http://www.w3.org/QA/ *** Be Strict To Be Cool *** _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss
