I'm very interested in the Species microformat, but the process seems to have stalled and I just wanted to poll opinion here as to why that might be. Is it due to a lack of demand? It seems that the successful microformats have been developed, in the main, by web designers and developers for web designers and developers. Could it be that web designers and developers of the microformats community do not perceive the value of a species microformat in the same way that they can see the value of, say, hCard, hReview, XFN, etc. The more successful microformats seem to be riding on the back of the "social web" zeitgeist, with many (most?) being used in this kind of context. I don't see species as being of particular interest to the bloggers and the other social-networking, mashup-making, digerati of current times. Is appealing to this demographic the key in getting a microformat developed? I'd appreciate the view of people in this community.
I also wanted to ask about the fundamental microformat principle of "paving the cowpaths" in relation to hCard. It seems to me that hCard was derived from vCard rather than being based on existing markup practice. How does this square up with the cowpaths philosophy? This brings me to a question about Species. The Species proposal doesn't really reflect current mark-up practice but instead represents what might be a good way of doing things in the future if authors were to start using it. The vocabulary in the proposal isn't plucked out of thin-air, though; it is taken from the taxonomic hierarchy as used by biologists. It seems to be modelled on hCard in this respect, hence my cowpaths question. My own feeling is that the current proposal is too complex. The current usage patterns as far as I can see (in the majority of cases) either have species names as plain text or marked-up with simple <strong> tags, or <em> or <i>. However, I'm not adverse to having a rich vocabulary of class names to call on should I need them (which 9 times out of 10 I won't), as long as a species name can still be marked-up very simply. This is similar to the way in which hCard has a rich vocabulary, but can still be very simple. -- Charles Roper www.sxbrc.org.uk _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss
