Structural markup = Google power
Grok Headline matches for Structural markup = Google power
Enhancing Structural Markup with
JavaScript
Enhancing Structural Markup with
JavaScript
12/10/2003 09:07 PMWebmasterBase Dec 10 2003 7:52PM ET
Structural Patterns in XML
Structural Patterns in XML
09/04/2002 07:03 PMWill Provost shows how design patterns in XML structures can be used
to help development of W3C XML Schemas.
Structural patterns in XML (xml.com)
Structural patterns in XML (xml.com)
09/05/2002 10:28 AMOther News: Windows Structural Problems
Other News: Windows Structural Problems
04/13/2004 10:04 AMRyan Hunter discusses Windows' history and structural problems.
Dr. Frame3D: 3-D CAD Program Determines
Structural Strength
Dr. Frame3D: 3-D CAD Program Determines
Structural Strength
09/22/2004 10:43 AMIt's easy to learn, it has every feature you might reasonably require,
nd it sells for the lowest price ever seen for this kind of software.
By Charles Seiter, Macworld (via MyAppleMenu)
Structural Analysis for Java 1.0.0
(Default branch)
Structural Analysis for Java 1.0.0
(Default branch)
04/12/2005 03:24 AMStructural Analysis for Java is a set of tools to automatically detect
and pinpoint architectural weaknesses. It is a collaboration between
the expertise of Rational with IBM's testing and analysis know-how,
using algorithms to hunt out antipatterns. SA4J provides
mathematically proven ways of determining the quality of the
architecture, and this assessment can be used as a basis for deciding
whether to reuse or modify existing Java code. If code is marked as
unstable, even the smallest change in the architecture can result in
unexpected delays in development as well as potentially more defects.
The Power of Google
The Power of Google
04/08/2005 11:53 AMThe capacity to nurture a scandal is just more proof that Google's
power is growing.
Power Google Course
Power Google Course
09/18/2004 01:22 PMReg Aubry, who is NOT related to Reg Shoe or the Flying Aubrys, but
who is the discoverer of the phonebook: syntax, is offering an online
course called Power Google:...
Transfer of power on Google.com
Transfer of power on Google.com
03/13/2003 09:56 PMRealtor" in its advertising copy could prove beneficial for national
online brokerage companies and local commission discounters that also
advertise on Google ...
Celeb searches power Google
Celeb searches power Google
01/05/2004 03:38 AMiafrica.com Jan 5 2004 3:16AM ET
Google adds to star power
Google adds to star power
06/22/2004 07:02 PMAlso: iPod plans turn car owners green and Jobs says his house is a
dump.
Google Finds Brand Power
Google Finds Brand Power
02/11/2003 05:51 PMBy Rex Moore. The votes are in, and the top brand in the world is...
Google. The Internet search engine finished ahead of such household
...
Google to power Dutch classifieds sites
Google to power Dutch classifieds sites
05/06/2004 08:40 AMDMeurope.com May 6 2004 12:29PM GMT
Overture to Buy More Search Power to
Fight Google
Overture to Buy More Search Power to
Fight Google
02/26/2003 05:44 PMNEW YORK (Reuters) - Paid Internet search provider Overture Services
Inc. (OVER.O) on Tuesday took another step to challenge its chief
rival, Google, by ...
Microsoft Building Search Power to
Challenge Google
Microsoft Building Search Power to
Challenge Google
06/21/2004 02:37 AMLos Angeles Times Jun 21 2004 7:14AM GMT
Vanishing Jobs: Structural change in the
economy means many jobs are never going
to come back. 12/19
Vanishing Jobs: Structural change in the
economy means many jobs are never going
to come back. 12/19
12/20/2003 05:03 AMIt's been a long time since I heard anything positive about American
programming jobs .. Those Good Paying Jobs Are Not Coming
Back
money.cnn.com/2003/12/17/pf/q_nomorework/index.htm?cnn=yes
track
this site | 4 links
Google, Yahoo Power Search Engine
Marketing Strategies and SEO Secrets
Revealed
Google, Yahoo Power Search Engine
Marketing Strategies and SEO Secrets
Revealed
02/01/2005 09:10 PMIf you want to kill your competition in PPC search or simply learn SEM
and SEO from the ground up. Did-it can help. Want to concentrate on
power strategies for Overture and Google? these seminars are for you.
Need more help with Search Marketing, call us. [PRWEB Jan 31, 2005]
Q: Markup format?
Q: Markup format?
03/14/2005 05:10 PM Q: Which markup format do you use when
posting?
Both Textile and Markdown are installed and I flip between them.
When I want to post a lot of code without hassle I'll use Markdown
because it seems smarter about that kind of thing. Most of the time,
however, I want to just write so I'll use Textile; I find that it's a
quick and mildly-intuitive way to access the various classes in my
stylesheet for the myriad of things I do within this little block of
space. Each has a purpose, so each gets used. I rarely enter raw
HTML, and when I do it's typically to get
around something broken in either markup format.
Et toi?
This entry was in Textile, for those keeping score. It
is much easier to enter p(ps). or p(note). rather than <p
class="ps"> or <p class="note">. 
Markup in titles in RSS?
Markup in titles in RSS?
12/13/2003 08:14 AM
The RSS 2.0
spec and its predecessors may not say clearly enough if you can or
can't include markup in titles. But I don't think you should
include markup in titles. Titles are like file names (not exactly of
course). They are a happy medium between software and people. Both
must be able to read them and make sense of them, in all contexts, and
do so easily. While it seems reasonable that a description may contain
markup, it also seems reasonable that a title should not. So, if I
were writing a validator for RSS, and encountered markup in a title,
I'd warn the author that many processors would not be happy about this
and it would be safer to strip the markup from the title.
Disclaimer: Scripting News is a weblog, not a spec. If you
interpret it as a spec you will be making a mistake. I think I've said
this quite a few times, but a few people still treat it as if I were
writing a spec here. Not so. And not fair.
A postscript. I went back to see what the spec actually says,
and it turns out it's not really a problem with the spec, rather with
my recollection of what the spec says. Scroll to elem
ents of item. It says descriptions may contain entity-encoded
HTML. It doesn't say that a title may. So if that's the biggest
problem people can find with the spec (which many were flaming about
when I wrote it, it's not like they offered any help, btw) then it's a
pretty damned good spec if you ask me.
Markup-TreeNode-1.1.0
Markup-TreeNode-1.1.0
11/12/2003 06:50 PMMarkup-Tree-1.1.0
Markup-Tree-1.1.0
11/12/2003 06:50 PMSimple markup
Simple markup
03/11/2003 11:53 AM
Timothy
Appnel: I have a new appreciation for the elegeance and
simplicity of XML markup. Not that I didn't have one before its
just grown the size of the Empire state building and illuminated in
neon.
Obviously, I'm currently embarking on a
similar
mission, and share Tim's appreciation for XML. My goals,
however, are much lower than Tim's: I'm not trying to create a full
markup language. I'm applying 80/20 whenever I can: e.g.,
unordered lists are enough. The times when full functionality
is required, I'll personally use full XHTML.
I'm currently looking into
textile
for inspiration.
W3C Markup Validator Upgraded
W3C Markup Validator Upgraded
05/06/2004 09:47 PM2004-05-06: W3C is pleased to announce an upgrade to the W3C Markup
Validation Service. The new release is easier to use and install. It
features new documentation and navigation, and offers helpful
explanations and recovery mechanisms instead of fatal errors. Managed
by a team of volunteers and the W3C Quality Assurance Activity, and
supported by a large community, this validator is the single most
popular resource on the W3C Web site. Read the announcement. (News
archive)
Keep 'em separated: Layout and markup.
Keep 'em separated: Layout and markup.
10/28/2003 11:06 PMSo, my idea was to follow the nice development models that often exist
at a platform level in UI architecture and apply them to the view
components of a design pattern - particularly with an focus on
extensibility. But I...
FML: Fiction Markup Language
FML: Fiction Markup Language
01/16/2004 11:33 AMWhen is someone going to come up with Fiction Markup Language
— an XML spec solely for annotating fiction? For example:
Take perhaps the greatest novel ever written: Ian Fleming's 1953
classic "Casino Royale." Let's break this down from
a big chunk of text to make up something more usable.
Obviously, you could mark the chapters and section numbers, but
let's go further into the actual content of the narrative. Begin by
surrounding all spoken text with tags. For example:
<quote speaker="James Bond">My
name is Bond, James Bond</quote>
Perhaps you can have another attribute for "target" to identify to
whom he's speaking. Then I could do an XPath query to find everything
James Bond said to Vesper Lynd in the entire book.
And how about locations? Surround passages with their physical
location, like the casino floor, Bond's hotel room, etc. (where
appropriate — wouldn't work in all situations). I could then
use XPath to find all the unique locations in the book (this would be
great for the globe-hopping James Bond novels).
Identify "action" passages and mark them. How about the death of a
character? Mark them so I can immediately find out where Le Chiffre
was killed and read how it happened.
Introductions of characters are another thing. Mark the first
appearance of each character so if I can't remember who someone is, I
can go back and find where they first appeared and who they are.
I'm reading Tom Clancy's "Politika" right now, and
I can hardly keep track of everyone. It'd be handy to be able to
print a "report" showing who everyone is. (A good ebook client
implementation of this would know what page the reader was on and not
report anything past that page as to not spoil anything.)
Maybe mark the beginning and ending of pages as they appeared in
the original publication. And have some way for an expert to insert
commentary about the text.
James Bond novels are one thing, but imagine if someone did this
for, say, "War and
Peace". It would be like Cliffs Notes embedded in the
text of the book.
There's unexplored potential here. I can't be the first person to
think of this. (And another question: is this just an attempt to
completely suck the soul right out of fiction? Should we just leave
it the hell alone?)
Click here to comment on this entry
A myriad of markup systems
A myriad of markup systems
04/12/2004 11:15 PMIt's hard to avoid the legions of custom markup systems out there
these days. Every Wiki has it's own syntactical quirks, while packages
like Markdown, Textile, BBCode (in
dozens of variants), reStructuredText
offer easy ways of hooking markup conversion in to existing
applications. When it comes to being totally over-implemented and
infuratingly inconsistent, markup systems are rapidly catching up with
template packages. Never one to miss out on an opportunity to reinvent
the wheel, I've worked on several of each ;)
My most recent markup handling attempt has just been published as
part of my SitePoint article on
Bookmarklets (cl
iché). It's a structured markup language in a bookmarklet:
activate the bookmarklet to convert the text in any textarea on a page
to XHTML. The syntax is ridiculously simple, and
serves my limited needs just fine:
= This is a header
Here is a paragraph.
* This is a list of items
* Another item in the list
Converts to:
<h4>This is a header</h4>
<p>Here is a paragraph.</p>
<ul>
<li>This is a list of items</li>
<li>Another item in the list</li>
</ul>
The algorithm is simple, and easily portable to any language you
care to mention:
- Normalise newlines to \n, for cross-platform consistency.
- Split the text up on double newlines, to create a list of
blocks.
- For each block:
- If it starts with an equals sign, wrap it in header tags.
- If it starts with an asterisk, split it in to lines, make each a
list item (stripping off the asterisk at the start of the line if
required) and glue them all together inside a
<ul>.
- Otherwise, wrap it in a
<p> tag
provided it doesn't have one already.
- Glue everything back together again with a couple of newlines, to
make the underlying XHTML look pretty.
The bookmarklet comes in two flavours: Expand HTML
Shorthand (the full version) and Expand HTML Shorthand
IE, which loses header support in order to fit within IE's rippling 508 character limit.
A more capable bookmarklet could be built using the import-script-stub
method described in my
article, but the implementation of such a thing is left as an
exercise for the reader (I've always wanted to say that).
Incidentally, there's a very common bug in markup systems that
allow inline styles that proves extremely difficult to fix: that of
improperly nested tags. Say you have a system where
*text* is bold and _text_ is italic; what
happens when the user enters
_italic*italic-bold_bold*? Most systems (and that includes Markdown, Textile and my
home-rolled Python solution) use naive regular expressions for inline
markup processing and will output vadly formed XHTML: <em>italic<strong>italic-bold</em>bold
</strong>. To truly solve this problem requires a
context-sensitive parser, which involves an unpleasantly large amount
of effort to solve what looks like a simple bug.
Serenity through markup (ADTmag.com)
Serenity through markup (ADTmag.com)
10/02/2002 10:55 AMMRL (Markup Recipe Language)
MRL (Markup Recipe Language)
01/25/2004 08:35 PMWeb site updated
Annotated Gel Markup Language Project
Annotated Gel Markup Language Project
01/29/2004 03:02 PMResearch Article Published
Hate-pertext Markup Language
Hate-pertext Markup Language
04/09/2004 04:10 PMThere are quite a few conspiracy theories flying around the Net
regarding Lockergnome's most recent "White Album" redesign. Blogger
reaction? Overwhelmingly negative. Gnomie reaction? Overwhelmingly
positive. Bottom line? We're still working on it - as well as a
billion other things. I'm not asking for slack, but jumping Jesus on a
pogo stick - there are only so many hours in the day. We're doing our
best here, and appreciate the constructive criticism and code
suggestions. Hell, maybe we should "open source" the SOB....
No lines of markup were harmed during
this process
No lines of markup were harmed during
this process
01/08/2004 08:37 PMYeah, new year, new looks, and the best part: Apart from inserting one
single span on every page, no lines...
Recipe Exchange Markup Language
Recipe Exchange Markup Language
03/22/2005 06:23 PMDohh, reml-ref exe property says v0.5, but it is v0.6
Features: Extreme Markup 2004
Features: Extreme Markup 2004
09/15/2004 07:42 PMJames Mason files a brief recap of this year's Extreme Markup
Languages conference.
Extreme Markup Languages 2004
Extreme Markup Languages 2004
01/01/2004 05:07 PMOriginally announced at XML 2003, the Call for Participation for
Extreme Markup 2004 is now open. The conference will be held from 3-6
August in Montréal, Canada.
Requirements for the Ink Markup Language
Published
Requirements for the Ink Markup Language
Published
01/22/2003 02:35 PM22 January 2003: The Multimodal Interaction Working Group has released
Requirements for the Ink Markup Language as a W3C Note. This data
format represents ink entered with an electronic pen or stylus, and is
used to input and process handwriting, gestures, sketches, music and
other notational languages. Read about the Multimodal Interaction
Activity. (News archive)
PHP Template Markup Language (ztml)
PHP Template Markup Language (ztml)
05/08/2004 10:36 AMFirst alpha version released
Creative Comments: On the Uses and
Abuses of Markup
Creative Comments: On the Uses and
Abuses of Markup
01/15/2003 07:57 PMThe way Creative Commons recommends linking its machine-readable
licenses into HTML pages makes little sense, says Kendall Clark, and
proposes alternatives.
XML Tourist: Mapping and Markup, Part 1
XML Tourist: Mapping and Markup, Part 1
12/19/2004 03:49 PMIn John E. Simpson's XML Tourist column, he introduces GML, the
Geography Markup Language.
XML Tourist: Mapping and Markup, Part 2
XML Tourist: Mapping and Markup, Part 2
12/29/2004 08:49 PMIn the final part of his XML Tourist column's exploration of GML, John
E. Simpson introduces us to the component schema parts as well as to
some GML software.
Grok Description matches for Structural markup = Google power
GrokA matches for Structural markup = Google power
Structural markup = Google power