On 14 Jul 2008 at 22:39, Breton Slivka wrote: > There is another solution that I have been trying to advocate, which > is not metadata, and it's not natural language parsing. It is quite > simply, to define a strict date format that IS human readable,
But there already IS a strict date format, and is IS human readable without any language barriers. It's the ISO8601 date format, YYYY- MM-DD. Same for the time format, hh:mm:ss No, it's not the prettiest format, but it exists now and is universally accessible. A conversation on IRC some days ago suggested that just the date or time by itself pose no access barrier to speech readers (which is why the idea of splitting date from time is so attrative). > which can optionally be used in place of ISO 8601 in the title > attribute of an ABBR tag. And that's the OTHER problem people are objecting to, the (alleged) mis-use of the <abbr> tag. > Unless a screen reader supports iso8601 in a title > attribute specifically, ...and I believe that Jaws does, as long as the date is separated with dashes, eg. 2008-07-14 and the time is separated with colons, eg. 22:30:00 So, it's for these reasons that I am not in favour of any prosaic date formats. Besides, the microformats community doesn't exist to create date format standards -- it adopts existing standards to make existing content more accessible (both for people and programs). --Bob. -- -- -- -- Bob Jonkman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://sobac.com/sobac/ SOBAC Microcomputer Services Voice: +1-519-669-0388 6 James Street, Elmira ON Canada N3B 1L5 Cel: +1-519-635-9413 Software --- Office & Business Automation --- Consulting _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list microformats-discuss@microformats.org http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss