On 08/03/2007 13:47, Costello, Roger L. wrote:
That's where Microformats come into the picture.  Add the hCard
"family-name" subproperty to each local expression:

<li class="family-name">Costello</li>

<div class="family-name">Novak<div>

<informant class="family-name">Smith</informant>

<pilot class="family-name">Johnson</pilot>

<managingEditor class="family-name">Parker</managingEditor>

Now the information is resolutely specific and local; simultaneously,
it is globally and collectively useful.

What are the coordination costs of each author finding and agreeing to use the same class values? Those costs are cheapest when the specifications are centralized (e.g. microformats.org) but doesn't that centralization act as a bottleneck to development? To get this kind of coordination the authors have to wait until the appropriate specification has been agreed.

I think there are similarities here with the coordination costs of something like Xanadu (which required cooperation between parties to form links) and the WWW (which doesn't, I can link to Google without them linking to me). It was the elimination of coordination costs that allowed authors to work independently and allowed the exponential growth of the web.

Ian


_______________________________________________
microformats-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss

Reply via email to