location-examples: Difference between revisions

From Microformats Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(drafted with anecdotal notes from location-formats and LHC First Beam example)
 
(nowiki escape example to preserve single quotes as text)
Line 30: Line 30:


* [http://lhc-first-beam.web.cern.ch/lhc%2Dfirst%2Dbeam/practical.html LHC First Beam] announcement page:
* [http://lhc-first-beam.web.cern.ch/lhc%2Dfirst%2Dbeam/practical.html LHC First Beam] announcement page:
** "GPS: 46°13'59'' N; 6°3'20'' E"
** "<nowiki>GPS: 46°13'59'' N; 6°3'20'' E</nowiki>"


== existing practices ==
== existing practices ==

Revision as of 00:41, 9 September 2008

location examples

Part of the location microformat efforts.

anecdotal

Originally added to location-formats, people have seen:

  • links to mapping services, canonical URLs to 3rd party services like:
    • Google Maps
    • Map Quest
    • Yahoo Maps
  • human / named / legislated formats
    • named places, e.g. Westin St. Francis
    • addresses, including zip codes
  • global/mathematical/geometrical
    • Latitude / Longitude / Altitude
      • MAKE has a GeoURL button
      • Geo in RSS. Means a particular blog post is associated with a specific lat/long. Not specific about whether it means the location that the post was made from or the location was the post was about.
      • Most systems do not contemplate or support the altitude component of a coordinate. As 3D terrain mapping grows in popularity (Google Earth), expect geocoding systems to provide the altitude.

Find URLs for each of the above, and move them from this anecdotal section to the below real world examples section.

real world examples

Links to public web pages, either popular or insightful.

latitude longitude

People actually do publish latitude and longitude in human visible text.

existing practices

Summary of common patterns discovered.

see also