Tempo fa mi era capitato di guardare i feed di del.icio.us ed erano RSS2, quindi totalmente a base XML…

L’altro giorno riguardo per pura curiosita’ e scopro una cosa interessante: sono RSS1 con qualche plugin che tra l’altro uso anch’io…
[ anche se non sono ancora riconosciuti con il loro MIME type di rdf+xml ma intanto e’ un passo… ]

Tra le altre cose [ come avevo accennato tempo fa sul potenziare il proprio feed ], usa il modulo taxo che uso anch’io per le dc:subject, cioe’ in pratica per i tags e le categorie di un post…

In particolare usa dc:subject per una lista dei tags mentre taxo:topics per una lista di risorse RDF con i link ai tags…

Nei giorni in cui viene messo in discussione il supporto a RSS1 in Wordpress mi pare un gran bel spunto di riflessione,no?

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[ crosspost su VoIT ]

Sono molto impegnato in questi giorni, ma un minuto da dedicare alla piattaforma semantica di blogging che uso va perso:

sembra che gli hacker dietro Wordpress vogliano togliere il supporto ufficiale ai feeds Atom e RSS1 e RSS0.92…

RSS2 and Atom are both competent feed formats. All feed readers these days are built to understand one or both of them. It’s time we ditched RSS .92 and RDF, they’ve been bloating the WordPress core for too long. If they’re desperately needed a plugin can provide.

Ora per un software che si proclama come “state-of-the-art semantic personal publishing platform“ mi pare un colpo veramente dannoso…

Tra l’altro ho come la netta impressione che qualcuno sia stato fuorviato dai numeri immaginando che le vecchie versioni di RSS fossero solo vecchie, invece che tutt’altre tecnologie…

Senza contare l’importanza di RDF, che nel 2006 vedra’ credo un nuovo sviluppo di tools sempre piu’ usabili…

Ci sono un paio di ottimi post da segnalare sulla questione:

  • WordPress to drop RDF / RSS 1.0> hope that RDF 1.0 will not be dropped - and there are many Semantic Web hackers who are using WordPress and the RDF feed that it produces.
  • 3 Reasons Why WordPress Should Not Drop RSS 1.0> Dropping RSS 1.0 can’t be justified just because all RSS readers today support both RSS 1.0 and RSS 2.0. Granted that RSS readers today consume and process feeds of different formats pretty much the same way.However, it’s difficult to say whether this phnomenom will continue to hold in the future as people gain better knowledge about the use of RDF on the Web. Perhaps new Semantic Web technologies will open new doors to the consumption of RDF (RSS 1.0), which will enable us to build more smart web applications.

    As a WordPress user, I like to have options. I want to be able to choose the format of RSS feeds that I publish. I don’t want to be told what format is the “standard” format and what format is the “right” format.

  • WordPress and RSS 1.0> I think that’s a mistake, having the RSS 1.0 available means there is a direct RDF representation of the data.

    There is very active RDF development outside the syndication domain (e.g. this resource list or this), and for WP to cut the direct interoperability cord would be a retrograde step.
    Ok, RSS 1.0 may not be the ideal RDF representation - RSS 1.1 or an RDF/XML serialization of Atom/OWL would be preferable, primarily because they’re both based on the revised RDF specs which avoid the ugliness of escaped HTML in content. But RSS 1.0 is supported by virtually every feed reader, and mass deployment of cleaner RSS RDF/XML isn’t likely in the near future.

Sull’ultimo link segnalato e’ da vedere l’interessante tabella comparativa dei vari formati di feed syndication…

Speriamo la questione si risolva…

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For the people that has an interest in the RDF world, this web portal IS the main focus point, as it aggregates from different blogger the stuff around RDF world…
-> Planet RDF

It is based on RDF tools, of course and naturally…

But i don’t know why in these months it is not improved… [ lack of time is implicit ]

In fact as one of the main resources about RDF, it also can be used as the main proof of the advantages of RDF tecnology.
It’s a good start to make a little “marketing“ stuff about the triples world…

I have some ideas to improve the portal, and listen to me: just ideas, this is only some stuff and not a critic at all.. just an argument cue…

  • the portal is based on Redland toolkit, so it can use SPARQL support to the database of the all post aggregated from the beginning….
  • some useful ways of categorize posts from authors and posting time
  • a sort of Longwell data browsing of the posts
  • a Fresnel prototype viewer of the data, using Horus prototype maybe
  • … any other ideas?

In other words using the portal as informative and main “marketing“ point of the power of RDF tecnologies…

A point of aggregation not only of posts, but also of RDF uses…

Can be an idea?

The better way to improve the adoption of a technology is to show how it helps in a realworld scenario, isn’t it true?

Of course, all IMHO and from the user point of view… that begins to use the tecnology itself…

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Foto dell'autore

Matteo Brunati

Attivista Open Data prima, studioso di Civic Hacking e dell’importanza del ruolo delle comunità in seguito, vengo dalle scienze dell’informazione, dove ho scoperto il Software libero e l’Open Source, il Semantic Web e la filosofia che guida lo sviluppo degli standard del World Wide Web e ne sono rimasto affascinato.
Il lavoro (dal 2018 in poi) mi ha portato ad occuparmi di Legal Tech, di Cyber Security e di Compliance, ambiti fortemente connessi l’uno all’altro e decisamente sfidanti.


Compliance Specialist SpazioDati
Appassionato #CivicHackingIT


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