attention-examples: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
This page documents examples on the Web of published attention information. | This page documents examples on the Web of published attention information. | ||
This is part of an open standards community effort to update the Attention.XML format on a strong foundation of research of existing examples and formats, as well as leveraging the Attention.XML implementation experience from [http://attensa.com Attensa], [http://commerce.net CommerceNet], [http://technorati.com Technorati], and any other interested Attention developers. | |||
== Authors == | == Authors == |
Revision as of 22:24, 14 December 2005
Attention Examples
This page documents examples on the Web of published attention information.
This is part of an open standards community effort to update the Attention.XML format on a strong foundation of research of existing examples and formats, as well as leveraging the Attention.XML implementation experience from Attensa, CommerceNet, Technorati, and any other interested Attention developers.
Authors
- Tim Brown
- Tantek Çelik
- Eric Hayes
- Rohit Khare
- Kevin Marks
Attention Examples
Implicit Attention
- what I've listened to - Last.FM, and other scripts that do that
- KevinMarks will contribute more here
- eg http://www.seabury.edu/faculty/akma/2002_09_22_blogarch.html#e82241126
- ?? email rules files
Explicit Attention
- blogrolls, friendrolls (e.g. LiveJournal, XFN) - what/who I'm reading
- linkblogs / delicious feeds - how I have tagged sites I've read
- playlists of what songs I like - e.g. on MSN Spaces
- favorites.html files - yes, people actually publish these on the web
Inattention Examples
- killfiles
- email blacklists