I've been giving some thought to framing microformatted content as "attachments," along with a little paper clip icon. This would resonate with users who are familiar with email, but on the downside, a lot of people have been trained that attachments=danger.

-Alex

On Jun 28, 2007, at 11:29 PM, Pelle W wrote:

Paul Wilkins skrev:
From: "Alex Faaborg" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
|> Mozilla's user experience team is going to continue brainstorming the
best way to expose microformat detection to end users, along with the rest of the mozilla community. I'll post updates to this list from time to time, and it will be interesting to see what interfaces and names other people come up with as well.
The RSS feeds are accessed in the browser through the feed button.
So it makes sense that the microformat data should be accessed through the data button.

I do like data, it's concise and is easy to explain.

Q: What kind of data can I get from the data button?
A: Contact details, calender entries, geographic locations, . . .

Q: Does the data button always get the information?
A: No, only when the page author has specially marked out those parts of the page.
Data sounds good but since RSS also is data the RSS-feed should perhaps be reached from below the data-button to emphasize the similarities.

/ Pelle
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