Categories
Weblogging

World Summit weblog

Many thanks go out to Farrago for pointing out that there’s an extremely well organized weblog covering the World Summit.

Now, this is what a political weblog is all about. Take a look and tell me you’re not impressed with the organization of this weblog. It’s incredible.

Not only can you keep up daily what’s happening at the Summit, but you can post comments and the people maintaining the weblog will try and get questions answered, follow through on tips, and so on.

It’s a late start, the summit is already under way, but here’s the link.

Update: Rebecca Blood provided coverage of this weblog. And Dave just came through with a link. Thanks Dave!!!

 

 

Categories
Technology Weblogging

Threadneedle just got competition

Ben and Mena at Movable Type just released a Trackback threading tool that will build an entire tree out of MT trackbacks. Here’s a page showing the Trackbacks from one of my earlier postings

Yes, this is what ThreadNeedle is supposed to do. Yes, ThreadNeedle is not finished.

When you enable TrackBack for a posting, Movable Type embeds a small piece of RDF in the page, such as the following:

 

<rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf=”http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#”
xmlns:dc=”http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/”>
<rdf:Description
about=”http://burningbird.net/cgi-bin/mt-tb.cgi?tb_id=17″
dc:title=”World Summit Weblog”
dc:identifier=”http://weblog.burningbird.net/archives/000476.php”
dc:subject=”Politics”
dc:description=”Many thanks go out to Farrago for pointing out that there’s an extremely well organized weblog covering the World Summit. Now, this is what a political weblog is all about. Take a look and tell me you’re not impressed with…”
dc:creator=”shelley”
dc:date=”2002-08-2514:00:27-06:00″ />
</rdf:RDF>

 

This simplified RDF can be embedded because all of the RDF data is treated as attributes — notice that there’s nothing outside of the Description element? Attributes don’t get printed out via the parsers in the browsers.

So, why can’t I do this with ThreadNeedle? Two reasons.

First, I can’t control the output of the weblogging tools, so if I give you a piece of RDF to embed in your posting, the weblogging tool will try to add break tags (< br/>) to the code to handle line breaks in the RDF. This screws up all RDF processors.

Secondly, anything more sophisticated then the example I showed you requires special handling to embed the RDF in HTML/XHTML. Surrounding the data with the Script tags will work — the parsers ignore anything contained in script tags. However, this still doesn’t solve the problem of weblogging tool munging.

I can generate RDF, and it’s very doable to create an application that finds the RDF, and follows the threaded entries to the new page and looks for embedded RDF and so on (as the Movable Type Trackback threading application does, except that it uses the Trackback data stored in our local data stores) but I can’t control the munging of the RDF by the weblogging tool.

Ben, Mena, this was cool. Really. And thanks! I hate to be greedy, but can you and Ev and Dave and the other weblogging tool builders give us a window in the weblog posting page to include content that is embedded directly in the posting, without manipulation by the weblogging tool? Then others, such as myself, can provide functionality — such as ThreadNeedle — that isn’t dependent on the weblogging tool and without having to go through extraordinary means of handling this markup munging problem.

I realize that webloggers can turn off line breaks (either for a weblog or a posting), but many webloggers don’t know how to include their own HTML line breaking tags. What I’m looking for is the best of all possible worlds — a separate window that takes text which is added to the bottom of a weblog posting without any processing by the weblogging tool, while still allowing tool processing of the weblog entry itself.

Pretty please?

In the meantime, I have the Movable Type Threading CGI application running (Access here, pass in the URL of the page with Trackbacks). Feel free to try this with pages that have TrackBack enabled. If it slows my server too much, I’ll have to pull it, but we can give it a try for now.

Categories
Weblogging

Doc screwed the pooch

Doc must be tired from all that traveling when he wrote today:

Oh: when you get tired of all the male kinda shit that seems to comprise 5/4 of the blog world (techblog or warblog… now there’s a sexy selection), wander on over to the smartest babeblogs on the Web…

I know that Doc couldn’t possibly mean to come across so absolutely, completely, and without any excuse sexist. I had to check the calendar to see if, somehow, all of weblogging was magically transported back in time to the 50’s when I read this post.

Categories
Weblogging

Ooo! I like it!

Dorothea has rolled out the new weblog and it is very very very cool!

The writing will still be Dorothea, regardless of the look of the weblog, but I really do prefer the warmer colors and unique and snazzy design. I particularly like that little side box at the start of each posting.

Run over, take a peek, bring her some cookies–you know what we do in weblogging when someone’s moved.

(And Dorothea, the stretched image is just fine. In fact, I think it looks better stretched than not. But I have a feeling I’m in big trouble with Mr. Delacour now….yes, just checked. Oh, no! My cookies!)

Categories
Weblogging

Love, love, love

All you need is love, all you need is love,
All you need is love, love, love is all you need.
Love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love, love.

Have you all ever noticed that many Beatles lyrics fall flatter than a bad souffle when you read them out of context?

Speaking of which…

AKMA, cuz you asked me nice, I won’t use the love blog as a test case for ThreadNeedle.

But you ruined the illusion I was building, of you and Margaret on a mountain top…in Canada. You in a red jacket (white collar, natch), looking tenderly into Margaret’s eyes, singing When I’m calling you-oo-oo-oooo-oo.