mashup*
mashup*: Do You Want People To Know Where You Are? Paid Members Public
I’m not long back from the mashup* event in London about location [http://www.mashupevent.com/events/mashup-19-june/programme]. I’ll probably blog more about it in the morning when I’m not so tired, but here are a couple of initial thoughts: Mapping information to geographical locations really,
Mashup: Some Intelligent Thoughts Paid Members Public
One of my colleagues who was at teh Mashup event last night has a rather more insightful post about it on his Vox blog [http://piersj.vox.com/library/post/mashup-event.html].
The Mashup Crowd Paid Members Public
Worries and Threats: Can Codes of Conduct Work? Paid Members Public
Tony Fish [http://www.tonyfish.com/] is our contrarian for the night. Apparently the semantic web won’t work because Jamie Oliver and Gordon Ramsey cook differently, and restaurants are a finely tuned environment. Or something. Strangely, now that Q&A has started, the conversation has moved away from
Labelling The Web Paid Members Public
Paul Walsh of Segala [http://www.segala.com/] is up now. OK – they’ve written a browser extension that indicated in search results which sites are making declarations about their content. IE: a medical site could declare that it adhering to a code of practice. Others could declare that they
Explaining the Semantic Web (Or Die Trying) Paid Members Public
Sam Sethi is giving us a quick rundown on Microformats, and demonstrating how they can be used to embed data in a web page and then be used by other applications after they’re auto-detected.Nice little demo. First time I’ve got a handle on it. Marc Birbeck of