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=== POSH Blog posts === | === POSH Blog posts === | ||
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== History == | == History == |
Revision as of 18:22, 20 April 2007
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, of which microformats are built from and a proper subset. 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).
Be POSH
What can you do to be POSH and to make your websites POSH?
- Publish POSH content. Make sure your website publishes valid semantic (X)HTML, and uses semantic-class-names.
- 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.
Resources
POSH Presentations
- ...
POSH Tutorials
- ...
POSH Blogs
- ...
POSH Blog posts
- Writing Semantic HTML by Jesse Skinner (2006-02-22)
History
plain old semantic HTML
The earliest references to "plain old semantic HTML" that have been found so far are:
- 1998-05-01: Nic Hughes 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".