Brian Suda wrote:
James Tindall <james at atomless.com> wrote:

> I use the xfn rel="me" to link from my personal site to sites that I
> maintain and that represent me in some way but is there a microformat I
> should use to link to a site I have built for a client?

I can't seem to find a reference, but i remember a value called "made"
from somewhere.

It is not part of the core link types in HTML
http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/types.html#type-links

It's in the HTML 3.2 spec.

WHAT-WG has a few additional values for HTML5
http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/#linkTypes

As does the XHTML 2.0 draft:
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml2/mod- metaAttributes.html#adef_metaAttributes_rel

Whatsmore, RDFa <http://www.w3.org/TR/rdfa-syntax/> allows you to use terms from various non-W3C vocabularies such as Dublin Core (which has dc:creator and dc:contributor) and FOAF (which has foaf:made and foaf:maker). If you treat a website as being a "project", then the Description of a Project (DOAP) vocabulary might be handy too, as it has doap:developer, doap:maintainer, doap:documenter, doap:translator, doap:tester and doap:helper.

At http://buzzword.org.uk/cognition/ I use RDFa to indicate that the dc:creator, doap:maintainer, doap:developer, foaf:maker and doap:documenter of the project is me; that the dc:creator, author and foaf:maker of the page itself is me; and that I foaf:made and made both the project and the page. I also use the hCard microformat in conjunction with <address> to indicate that I am the contact person for the page.

--
Toby A Inkster
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<http://tobyinkster.co.uk>

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