Microformat 23
References
- Allsopp, John (March 2007). Microformats: Empowering Your Markup for Web 2.0. Friends of ED. p. 368.
ISBN 978-1-59059-814-6. - Orchard, Leslie M (September 2005). Hacking RSS and Atom. John Wiley & Sons. p. 602.
ISBN 978-0-7645-9758-9. - Robbins, Jennifer Niederst; Tantek Çelik, Derek Featherstone, Aaron Gustafson (February 2006). Web Design In
A Nutshell (Third ed.). O'Reilly Media. p. 826. ISBN 978-0-596-00987-8.
Further reading
- Suda, Brian (September 2006). Using Microformats. O'Reilly Media. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-596-528218.
- Ahmet Soylu, Patrick De Causmaecker, Fridolin Wild Ubiquitous Web for Ubiquitous Environments: The Role of
Embedded Semantics (http:/ / http://www. rintonpress. com/ journals/ jmmonline. html#v6n1), article in Journal of
Mobile Multimedia, Vol. 6, No.1, pp. 26–48, (2010). PDF (https:/ / lirias. kuleuven. be/ bitstream/ 123456789/
243944/ 2/ JMM_soylu_et_al_2010. pdf)
External links
- microformats.org (http:/ / microformats. org/ )
- Microformats Primer (http:/ / http://www. digital-web. com/ articles/ microformats_primer/ )
- Optimus (http:/ / microformatique. com/ optimus/ ) microformats parser and validator
- A four-part discussion of Microformats, UI issues, and possible presentation in Firefox 3 by Alex Faaborg of
Mozilla (http:/ / blog. mozilla. com/ faaborg/ 2006/ 12/ 11/ microformats-part-0-introduction)
Web 2.0
A tag cloud (a typical Web 2.0 phenomenon in itself) presenting Web 2.0 themes
Web 2.0 is a loosely defined intersection of
web application features that facilitate
participatory information sharing,
interoperability, user-centered design,[1] and
collaboration on the World Wide Web. A
Web 2.0 site allows users to interact and
collaborate with each other in a social media
dialogue as creators (prosumers) of
user-generated content in a virtual
community, in contrast to websites where
users (consumers) are limited to the passive
viewing of content that was created for
them. Examples of Web 2.0 include social
networking sites, blogs, wikis, video sharing
sites, hosted services, web applications,
mashups and folksonomies.
The term is closely associated with Tim O'Reilly because of the O'Reilly Media Web 2.0 conference in late
2004.[2][3] Although the term suggests a new version of the World Wide Web, it does not refer to an update to any
technical specification, but rather to cumulative changes in the ways software developers and end-users use the Web.
Whether Web 2.0 is qualitatively different from prior web technologies has been challenged by World Wide Web