posh: Difference between revisions
(46 intermediate revisions by 26 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<div style="float:right;margin-left:1em">__TOC__</div> | |||
<h1>Plain Old Semantic HTML (POSH)</h1> | <h1>Plain Old Semantic HTML (POSH)</h1> | ||
Welcome to the <abbr title="Plain Old Semantic HTML">POSH</abbr> home page. | Welcome to the <abbr title="Plain Old Semantic HTML">POSH</abbr> home page. | ||
== Origins == | == Origins == | ||
The acronym '''POSH''' was coined [http://rbach.priv.at/Microformats-IRC/2007-04-06#T091456 on 6 April 2007] on the microformats IRC channel, by <kwijibo> as a shorthand abbreviation for | The acronym '''POSH''' was coined [http://rbach.priv.at/Microformats-IRC/2007-04-06#T091456 on 6 April 2007] on the microformats IRC channel, by <kwijibo> as a shorthand abbreviation for "plain old semantic HTML". A discussion on among John Allsopp, Tantek Çelik, Jeremy Keith, and Chris Messina at the [[events/2007-04-18-web-2-expo-dinner|Microformats Dinner 2007 April 18 following Web 2.0 Expo]] reraised the idea of POSH and the importance of promoting the broader goal of POSH, which microformats are built from and are a proper subset of. For more see [[posh#History|History]]. | ||
== Why == | == Why == | ||
The term [[semantic-html]] is a mouthful, and belies both how simple it is, how well established it is among modern web designers, and the fact that it has benefits far beyond the obvious doing the right thing for the Web by using semantic markup. | The term [[semantic-html]] is a mouthful, and belies both how simple it is, how well established it is among modern web designers, and the fact that it has benefits far beyond the obvious doing the right thing for the Web by using semantic markup. We need a simple short mnemonic term that captures the essence of the concept, and is easily verbed (to posh, poshify, poshed up). | ||
== What == | == What == | ||
Line 17: | Line 16: | ||
What can you do to be POSH and to make your websites POSH? | What can you do to be POSH and to make your websites POSH? | ||
# Publish POSH content. Read POSH [[posh#Resources|resources]] and make sure your website publishes valid [[semantic-html|semantic (X)HTML]], and uses [[semantic-class-names]] accordingly. | # Publish POSH content. Read POSH [[posh#Resources|resources]] and make sure your website publishes [[valid]] [[semantic-html|semantic (X)HTML]], and uses [[semantic-class-names]] accordingly. | ||
# Spread POSH. Encourage others to be POSH and POSHify their websites by linking to this page. | # Spread POSH. Encourage others to be POSH and POSHify their websites by linking to this page. | ||
# Improve POSH. Help us gather resources to enable more people to easily POSHify their websites. | # Improve POSH. Help us gather resources to enable more people to easily POSHify their websites. | ||
Line 24: | Line 23: | ||
* The first rule of POSH is that you must [http://validator.w3.org validate] your POSH. | * The first rule of POSH is that you must [http://validator.w3.org validate] your POSH. | ||
* Second, drop the use of TABLEs for purely presentational purposes, spacer GIFs, and [[presentational-html]] in general. | * Second, drop the use of TABLEs for purely presentational purposes, spacer GIFs, and [[presentational-html]] in general. | ||
* Next, fix your [http://tantek.com/log/2002/10.html#L20021022t1432 | * Next, fix your [http://tantek.com/log/2002/10.html#L20021022t1432 '''B'''ed and '''BR'''eakfast] markup. | ||
* Eliminate [http://tantek.com/log/2002/11.html#L20021128t1352 Anorexic Anchors]. | * Eliminate [http://tantek.com/log/2002/11.html#L20021128t1352 Anorexic Anchors]. | ||
* Re-use pre-existing [[posh-patterns]]. | |||
* Use good [[semantic-class-names]]. | * Use good [[semantic-class-names]]. | ||
* ... | * ... | ||
== poshformats == | |||
The term "poshformats" distinguishes one-off, ad-hoc or more informal class-name based formats efforts from the more formally researched and documented microformats. Another way of describing the distinction is that microformats are the proper subset of poshformats which have been developed ''empirically'' via research and a formal methodology per the microformats [[process]] and [[principles]], rather than made-up ''a priori''. | |||
See [[poshformats]] for more. | |||
== Resources == | == Resources == | ||
=== POSH Patterns === | |||
As proper use of semantic HTML and discussions thereof predate microformats by quite a bit, there are numerous resources that document such POSH Patterns. In order to help discoverability and re-use, take a look at (and add what you find to) | |||
* [[posh-patterns]] | |||
=== POSH Tutorials === | === POSH Tutorials === | ||
Step by step tutorials to create POSH content or upgrade existing content to POSH. | Step by step tutorials to create POSH content or upgrade existing content to POSH. | ||
Line 38: | Line 47: | ||
=== POSH Bookmarks === | === POSH Bookmarks === | ||
* Check out the Ma.gnolia [http://ma.gnolia.com/groups/posh POSH Group] | * Check out the Ma.gnolia [http://ma.gnolia.com/groups/posh POSH Group] | ||
* See pages tagged both [http://del.icio.us/tag/posh+microformats POSH and microformats] on del.icio.us. | |||
=== POSH Presentations === | === POSH Presentations === | ||
Line 45: | Line 55: | ||
* [http://tantek.com/presentations/20040928sdforumws/semantic-xhtml.html Semantic XHTML: Can your website be your API? - Using semantic XHTML to show what you mean] (2004-09-28) | * [http://tantek.com/presentations/20040928sdforumws/semantic-xhtml.html Semantic XHTML: Can your website be your API? - Using semantic XHTML to show what you mean] (2004-09-28) | ||
* [http://tantek.com/presentations/2005/09/elements-of-xhtml/ The Elements of Meaningful XHTML] (2005-09-29, first version: [http://tantek.com/presentations/2005/03/elementsofxhtml/ 2005-03-13 at SXSW Interactive]). | * [http://tantek.com/presentations/2005/09/elements-of-xhtml/ The Elements of Meaningful XHTML] (2005-09-29, first version: [http://tantek.com/presentations/2005/03/elementsofxhtml/ 2005-03-13 at SXSW Interactive]). | ||
* [http://developers.blogs.sapo.pt/6776.html HTML/XHTML] in Portuguese. 2009-03-26. | |||
* [http://www.slideshare.net/AaronGustafson/learning-to-love-forms-web-directions-south-07 Learning To Love Forms]: an Aaron Gustafson's slideshow for designing semantic and modular xHTML forms. | |||
* ... | * ... | ||
* See also more microformats [[presentations]] in general. | * See also more microformats [[presentations]] in general. | ||
Line 53: | Line 65: | ||
* <cite>[http://microformatique.com/book/ Microformats empowering your markup for Web 2.0]</cite> by <span class="vcard"><span class="url fn n"><span class="given-name">John</span> <span class="family-name">Allsopp</span>.</span></span> Chapter 3 is a detailed and practical overview of the appropriate use of structural, valid and semantic HTML. | * <cite>[http://microformatique.com/book/ Microformats empowering your markup for Web 2.0]</cite> by <span class="vcard"><span class="url fn n"><span class="given-name">John</span> <span class="family-name">Allsopp</span>.</span></span> Chapter 3 is a detailed and practical overview of the appropriate use of structural, valid and semantic HTML. | ||
* <cite>[http://htmlmastery.com/ http://htmlmastery.com/images/hm-cover-sm.gif][http://htmlmastery.com/ Semantics, Standards and Styling]</cite> by <span class="vcard"><span class="url fn n"><span class="given-name">Paul</span> <span class="family-name">Haine</span>.</span></span> | * <cite>[http://htmlmastery.com/ http://htmlmastery.com/images/hm-cover-sm.gif][http://htmlmastery.com/ Semantics, Standards and Styling]</cite> by <span class="vcard"><span class="url fn n"><span class="given-name">Paul</span> <span class="family-name">Haine</span>.</span></span> | ||
* <cite>[http://www.sitepoint.com/books/html1/ http://www.sitepoint.com/images/books/html1/books-index.gif][http://www.sitepoint.com/books/html1/ Build Your Own Web Site The Right Way Using HTML & CSS]</cite> by <span class="vcard"><span class="url fn n"><span class="given-name">Ian</span> <span class="family-name">Lloyd</span>.</span></span> | |||
=== POSH Magazines === | === POSH Magazines === | ||
Line 74: | Line 87: | ||
Blog posts that provide specific, modern, guidance, techniques and tips for using more and better semantic HTML. This list is ''incomplete''. We know there are lots more blog posts out there that fit the aforementioned description - please add them! If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to [[posh-blog-posts]]. | Blog posts that provide specific, modern, guidance, techniques and tips for using more and better semantic HTML. This list is ''incomplete''. We know there are lots more blog posts out there that fit the aforementioned description - please add them! If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to [[posh-blog-posts]]. | ||
* [http://www.456bereastreet.com/archive/200711/posh_plain_old_semantic_html/ POSH - Plain Old Semantic HTML] by Roger Johansson. | |||
* [http://www.plaintxt.org/wp-content/uploads/sandbox-v09_readme.html The Sandbox theme for WordPress readme.html] discusses what POSH is and how the theme helps users use it. | |||
* [http://tantek.com/log/2002/10.html#L20021022t1432 Bed and BReakfast markup (B&BR)] (2002-10-22) - avoiding nonsemantic uses of <nowiki><b>old and <br>eak</nowiki> tags and using <nowiki><h3>adings and <p>aragraphs</nowiki> instead. | * [http://tantek.com/log/2002/10.html#L20021022t1432 Bed and BReakfast markup (B&BR)] (2002-10-22) - avoiding nonsemantic uses of <nowiki><b>old and <br>eak</nowiki> tags and using <nowiki><h3>adings and <p>aragraphs</nowiki> instead. | ||
* [http://tantek.com/log/2002/11.html#L20021128t1352 <nowiki><A>norexic </A>nchors</nowiki>] (2002-11-28) - use the "id" attribute on existing elements instead of adding empty <code><nowiki><a name="foo"></a></nowiki></code> elements. Use [[rel-bookmark]] for post permalinks within the document. | * [http://tantek.com/log/2002/11.html#L20021128t1352 <nowiki><A>norexic </A>nchors</nowiki>] (2002-11-28) - use the "id" attribute on existing elements instead of adding empty <code><nowiki><a name="foo"></a></nowiki></code> elements. Use [[rel-bookmark]] for post permalinks within the document. | ||
Line 80: | Line 95: | ||
* [http://tantek.com/log/2003/01.html#L20030104t1249 Comment markup, presentation and plumbing] (2003-01-04) - how to markup a list of comments, including example use of the rare "hreflang" attribute. | * [http://tantek.com/log/2003/01.html#L20030104t1249 Comment markup, presentation and plumbing] (2003-01-04) - how to markup a list of comments, including example use of the rare "hreflang" attribute. | ||
* [http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2004/07/18/competent-classing Competent Classing by Eric Meyer] (2004-07-18) | * [http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2004/07/18/competent-classing Competent Classing by Eric Meyer] (2004-07-18) | ||
* [http://meiert.com/en/blog/20080812/best-practice-ids-and-classes/ Best Practice for ID and Class Names by Jens Meiert] (2008-08-12) | |||
* [http://tantek.com/log/2004/07.html#d20t2359 More about the 'class' attribute] (2004-07-20) | * [http://tantek.com/log/2004/07.html#d20t2359 More about the 'class' attribute] (2004-07-20) | ||
* [http://www.uie.com/articles/holzschlag_interview/ Web Standards in the Real World: An Interview with Molly Holzschlag] (2005-06-01) | * [http://www.uie.com/articles/holzschlag_interview/ Web Standards in the Real World: An Interview with Molly Holzschlag] (2005-06-01) | ||
Line 94: | Line 110: | ||
* [http://friedcellcollective.net/outbreak/2007/04/22/im-posh-are-you/ I’m POSH - are you?] (2007-04-23) | * [http://friedcellcollective.net/outbreak/2007/04/22/im-posh-are-you/ I’m POSH - are you?] (2007-04-23) | ||
* [http://www.unintentionallyblank.co.uk/2007/04/24/plain-old-semantic-html/ The Internet’s Upper Class Or Why Your Site Should Be POSH] (2007-04-24) | * [http://www.unintentionallyblank.co.uk/2007/04/24/plain-old-semantic-html/ The Internet’s Upper Class Or Why Your Site Should Be POSH] (2007-04-24) | ||
* [http://nate.koechley.com/blog/2006/12/15/divitis_and_correct_div_usage/ On Appropriate Use of DIVs, or When Divitis Doesn’t Apply] by Nate Koechley, 2006-12-15 | |||
* [http://nate.koechley.com/blog/2006/12/22/note_on_structural_and_semantic_meaning/ Quick Comment: Choose Class/ID Names Based on Semantic and/or Structural Meaning] by Nate Koechley, 2006-12-22 | |||
* [http://leland.nu/think/2006/07/31/seeing-is-believing/ SEEing is believing] - using standards and efficient design, coding, maintenance, and marketing to produce a search-engine-efficient site by Richard Leland (2006-07-31) | |||
* [http://nascentguruism.com/journal/perfection/ Perfection] - by Steve Marshall (2007-11-02) | |||
* ... | * ... | ||
Line 99: | Line 119: | ||
===POSH Podcasts=== | ===POSH Podcasts=== | ||
* [http://www.netmag.co.uk/podcasts/07-05-03-net.mp3 A talk about POSH] in the .Net magazine podcast episode 8 (56 minutes; 26 Mb. Relevant section 30:10-42:40) | If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to [[posh-podcasts]]. | ||
* 2007-05-03: [http://www.netmag.co.uk/podcasts/07-05-03-net.mp3 A talk about POSH] in the .Net magazine podcast episode 8 (56 minutes; 26 Mb. Relevant section 30:10-42:40) | |||
* 2005-09-29: [http://microformats.org/media/2005/09/we05-2-tantek-celik.mp3 The Elements of Meaningful XHTML] - podcast of Tantek's presentation by the same name ([http://tantek.com/presentations/2005/09/elements-of-xhtml/ slides]) | |||
=== Hidden POSH Treasures === | === Hidden POSH Treasures === | ||
Line 112: | Line 134: | ||
* Use the [http://www.plaintxt.org/themes/sandbox/ Sandbox] or [http://getk2.com K2] themes that already support hAtom and hCard | * Use the [http://www.plaintxt.org/themes/sandbox/ Sandbox] or [http://getk2.com K2] themes that already support hAtom and hCard | ||
* Add the [http://redmonk.net/archives/2007/04/18/wordpress-widget-hcard-about-box/ hCard About Widget] to your site | * Add the [http://redmonk.net/archives/2007/04/18/wordpress-widget-hcard-about-box/ hCard About Widget] to your site | ||
=== external POSH brainstorming === | |||
A couple of external wikis have been created to brainstorm and explore [[posh-patterns]]. | |||
* [http://poshformats.org/ poshformats.org] - fairly new, and encourages re-use. sample illustrative [[poshformat]] provided. | |||
* [http://poshzone.wikidot.com/markupbazaar poshZone] - older, and appears to reinvent various microformats like [[hCard]] just to add a new property like stock symbol. Much better to re-use existing [[microformats]] and [[posh-patterns]] first, and then only add POSH for anything new, rather than reinventing from scratch. | |||
== Spread POSH == | == Spread POSH == | ||
Line 117: | Line 144: | ||
* Promote POSH. Make a POSH button (perhaps using semantic HTML and CSS ;) linking to this page and put it on your site, in your blogroll, in your footer, etc. Maybe even come up with a nice POSH button graphic and share it with the microformats community with a liberal license (public domain, CC-by-3.0, MIT, etc.) Like these: | * Promote POSH. Make a POSH button (perhaps using semantic HTML and CSS ;) linking to this page and put it on your site, in your blogroll, in your footer, etc. Maybe even come up with a nice POSH button graphic and share it with the microformats community with a liberal license (public domain, CC-by-3.0, MIT, etc.) Like these: | ||
** [http://redmonk.net/archives/2007/04/25/the-new-question/ http://redmonk.net/ | ** [http://redmonk.net/archives/2007/04/25/the-new-question/ http://redmonk.net/mt/mt-static/uploads/2007/04/are_you_posh.png] - [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ CC-by-3.0] | ||
** [http:// | ** [http://www.hauntedpalace.net/pandora/craic/poshscribbles.png http://www.hauntedpalace.net/pandora/craic/poshscribbles.png] — [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ CC-by-3.0] | ||
** [http://www.hauntedpalace.net/pandora/craic/poshChopin.png http://www.hauntedpalace.net/pandora/craic/poshChopin.png] — [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ CC-by-3.0] | |||
* Tell a friend. Talk to web design friends about POSH and convince and help them to poshify both their personal websites, and the websites they build for others. Blog about your experience with poshification and what steps you went through to poshify your websites. Write a [[posh-testimonial]]! | * Tell a friend. Talk to web design friends about POSH and convince and help them to poshify both their personal websites, and the websites they build for others. Blog about your experience with poshification and what steps you went through to poshify your websites. Write a [[posh-testimonial]]! | ||
* Come up with more ideas to help spread POSH. Here are a few. | * Come up with more ideas to help spread POSH. Here are a few. |
Latest revision as of 04:58, 7 April 2013
Plain Old Semantic HTML (POSH)
Welcome to the POSH home page.
Origins
The acronym POSH was coined on 6 April 2007 on the microformats IRC channel, by <kwijibo> as a shorthand abbreviation for "plain old semantic HTML". A discussion on among John Allsopp, Tantek Çelik, Jeremy Keith, and Chris Messina at the Microformats Dinner 2007 April 18 following Web 2.0 Expo reraised the idea of POSH and the importance of promoting the broader goal of POSH, which microformats are built from and are a proper subset of. For more see History.
Why
The term semantic-html is a mouthful, and belies both how simple it is, how well established it is among modern web designers, and the fact that it has benefits far beyond the obvious doing the right thing for the Web by using semantic markup. We need a simple short mnemonic term that captures the essence of the concept, and is easily verbed (to posh, poshify, poshed up).
What
POSH encapsulates the best practices of using semantic HTML to author web pages. Semantic HTML is the subset of HTML 4.01 (or XHTML 1.0) elements and attributes that are semantic rather than presentational. The best way to learn and understand POSH is to do it. Pick a page on your web site to begin with, and apply the POSH Checklist to it. Continue with the POSH Process. Read POSH Resources to learn more about POSH.
The POSH Process
What can you do to be POSH and to make your websites POSH?
- Publish POSH content. Read POSH resources and make sure your website publishes valid semantic (X)HTML, and uses semantic-class-names accordingly.
- Spread POSH. Encourage others to be POSH and POSHify their websites by linking to this page.
- Improve POSH. Help us gather resources to enable more people to easily POSHify their websites.
The POSH Checklist
- The first rule of POSH is that you must validate your POSH.
- Second, drop the use of TABLEs for purely presentational purposes, spacer GIFs, and presentational-html in general.
- Next, fix your Bed and BReakfast markup.
- Eliminate Anorexic Anchors.
- Re-use pre-existing posh-patterns.
- Use good semantic-class-names.
- ...
poshformats
The term "poshformats" distinguishes one-off, ad-hoc or more informal class-name based formats efforts from the more formally researched and documented microformats. Another way of describing the distinction is that microformats are the proper subset of poshformats which have been developed empirically via research and a formal methodology per the microformats process and principles, rather than made-up a priori.
See poshformats for more.
Resources
POSH Patterns
As proper use of semantic HTML and discussions thereof predate microformats by quite a bit, there are numerous resources that document such POSH Patterns. In order to help discoverability and re-use, take a look at (and add what you find to)
POSH Tutorials
Step by step tutorials to create POSH content or upgrade existing content to POSH.
- Validating your css and html A simple step by step guide to how and why you should validate your markup
- ...
POSH Bookmarks
- Check out the Ma.gnolia POSH Group
- See pages tagged both POSH and microformats on del.icio.us.
POSH Presentations
Presentations which explain and advocate concepts and techniques for utilizing semantic HTML. If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to posh-presentations.
- CSS: Between the Style Sheets by Tantek Çelik (2003-03), specifically, see slides 3-4,6 starting with "Leaving the <B>ed & <BR>eakfast", and slide 9 "CSS & the Semantic Spectrum" which provides an overview of the semantic spectrum of (X)HTML tags.
- real world semantics (2004-02-11)
- Semantic XHTML: Can your website be your API? - Using semantic XHTML to show what you mean (2004-09-28)
- The Elements of Meaningful XHTML (2005-09-29, first version: 2005-03-13 at SXSW Interactive).
- HTML/XHTML in Portuguese. 2009-03-26.
- Learning To Love Forms: an Aaron Gustafson's slideshow for designing semantic and modular xHTML forms.
- ...
- See also more microformats presentations in general.
POSH Books
Modern web design books which document good semantic HTML practices.
- Web Design in a Nutshell, Third Edition by Jennifer Niederst Robbins See Jenville.
- Microformats empowering your markup for Web 2.0 by John Allsopp. Chapter 3 is a detailed and practical overview of the appropriate use of structural, valid and semantic HTML.
- Semantics, Standards and Styling by Paul Haine.
- Build Your Own Web Site The Right Way Using HTML & CSS by Ian Lloyd.
POSH Magazines
Online (and off) magazines which frequently publish articles about semantic HTML. If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to posh-magazines.
- A List Apart: For People Making Websites (see in particular HTML and XHTML Articles)
- Digital Web Magazine
POSH Blogs
Blogs that with some regularity post high quality discussions, insights, and in general have advanced the state of the art of POSH. If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to posh-blogs.
- David Baron's weblog
- Jeffrey Zeldman Presents
- meyerweb.com - Eric Meyer
- Microformatique - John Allsopp
- SimpleBits - Dan Cederholm (see in particular SimpleQuiz)
- Tantek Çelik
- ...
POSH Blog posts
Blog posts that provide specific, modern, guidance, techniques and tips for using more and better semantic HTML. This list is incomplete. We know there are lots more blog posts out there that fit the aforementioned description - please add them! If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to posh-blog-posts.
- POSH - Plain Old Semantic HTML by Roger Johansson.
- The Sandbox theme for WordPress readme.html discusses what POSH is and how the theme helps users use it.
- Bed and BReakfast markup (B&BR) (2002-10-22) - avoiding nonsemantic uses of <b>old and <br>eak tags and using <h3>adings and <p>aragraphs instead.
- <A>norexic </A>nchors (2002-11-28) - use the "id" attribute on existing elements instead of adding empty
<a name="foo"></a>
elements. Use rel-bookmark for post permalinks within the document. - A Touch of Class (2002-12-16) - introduction to proper use of the HTML 'class' attribute.
- Dive into Semantic MARKup (2002-12-31)
- Comment markup, presentation and plumbing (2003-01-04) - how to markup a list of comments, including example use of the rare "hreflang" attribute.
- Competent Classing by Eric Meyer (2004-07-18)
- Best Practice for ID and Class Names by Jens Meiert (2008-08-12)
- More about the 'class' attribute (2004-07-20)
- Web Standards in the Real World: An Interview with Molly Holzschlag (2005-06-01)
- Webpatterns and websemantics (2005-11-18)
- Writing Semantic HTML by Jesse Skinner (2006-02-22)
- Who will read your Semantic HTML? by Jesse Skinner (2007-01-04)
- Semantics in HTML by John Allsopp (2007-01-08 - 2007-03-12)
- Part I - Traditional HTML Semantics (2007-01-08)
- Part II - standardizing vocabularies (2007-02-20)
- Part III - Towards a semantic web (2007-03-12)
- Built in HTML semantics A list of the semantic elements and attributes of HTML by John Allsopp (2007-01-08)
- The Importance of Being POSH by Tantek Çelik (2007-04-20)
- Getting back to POSH (Plain ol’ Semantic HTML) by Chris Messina (2007-04-21)
- I’m POSH - are you? (2007-04-23)
- The Internet’s Upper Class Or Why Your Site Should Be POSH (2007-04-24)
- On Appropriate Use of DIVs, or When Divitis Doesn’t Apply by Nate Koechley, 2006-12-15
- Quick Comment: Choose Class/ID Names Based on Semantic and/or Structural Meaning by Nate Koechley, 2006-12-22
- SEEing is believing - using standards and efficient design, coding, maintenance, and marketing to produce a search-engine-efficient site by Richard Leland (2006-07-31)
- Perfection - by Steve Marshall (2007-11-02)
- ...
See more blogs talking about "semantic HTML" and POSH.
POSH Podcasts
If/when this section gets too big, we can move it to posh-podcasts.
- 2007-05-03: A talk about POSH in the .Net magazine podcast episode 8 (56 minutes; 26 Mb. Relevant section 30:10-42:40)
- 2005-09-29: The Elements of Meaningful XHTML - podcast of Tantek's presentation by the same name (slides)
Hidden POSH Treasures
The following sites have POSH related articles, tutorials etc. on them, but you have to dig for them from the home page. Help find the hidden POSH treasures in these sites and add direct links to POSH related articles, tutorials etc. to the specific sections above. You can leave the top level site links here until/unless you have dug thru the entire site and found all the treasures.
POSH Bling for your Blog
If you want to improve your existing blog, there are some pretty simple things you can do:
WordPress
- Use the Sandbox or K2 themes that already support hAtom and hCard
- Add the hCard About Widget to your site
external POSH brainstorming
A couple of external wikis have been created to brainstorm and explore posh-patterns.
- poshformats.org - fairly new, and encourages re-use. sample illustrative poshformat provided.
- poshZone - older, and appears to reinvent various microformats like hCard just to add a new property like stock symbol. Much better to re-use existing microformats and posh-patterns first, and then only add POSH for anything new, rather than reinventing from scratch.
Spread POSH
Now that you've poshified your website(s), what next? Well, help spread POSH to other websites!
- Promote POSH. Make a POSH button (perhaps using semantic HTML and CSS ;) linking to this page and put it on your site, in your blogroll, in your footer, etc. Maybe even come up with a nice POSH button graphic and share it with the microformats community with a liberal license (public domain, CC-by-3.0, MIT, etc.) Like these:
- Tell a friend. Talk to web design friends about POSH and convince and help them to poshify both their personal websites, and the websites they build for others. Blog about your experience with poshification and what steps you went through to poshify your websites. Write a posh-testimonial!
- Come up with more ideas to help spread POSH. Here are a few.
- Hold a PoshPit - a one or half day marathon session mixing semantic HTML experts with folks who maintain/run web sites in general and see how many websites you can collectively upgrade to POSH during the course of the day.
- ...
Improve POSH
As you read the POSH resources documented here, what other POSH resources did you find? Add them to this page.
With your experience with both poshifying your sites and helping others do so, what have you learned? What kind of issues did you run into? What questions were commonly asked? What do you feel like you need to more easily and quickly help more people poshify their content?
History
A brief history of references to "POSH" in this context and "plain old semantic HTML".
plain old semantic HTML
The earliest references to "plain old semantic HTML" that have been found so far are:
- 1998-05-01: Kirrily 'Skud' Robert on comp.infosystems.www.authoring.site-design - "The site is implemented in HTML 4.0 Transitional with style sheets; this means that anyone with an older browser won't get presentational markup, just plain old semantic HTML. "
- 2006-09-21 Drew's comment by on "Tables and SEO": "I’d say it’s well worth it for a variety of reasons to only use tables when you’re presenting tabular data, and use plain old semantic HTML to mark up your content in all other cases." (retrieved by Tantek 08:20, 20 Apr 2007 (PDT))
If you can find earlier references, please add them and include a brief quotation of the context of the reference to "plain old semantic HTML".