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Saturday, July 24, 2010

Top 10 Semantic Web Products of 2009

Top 10 Semantic Web Products of 2009

Written by Richard MacManus / December 2, 2009 10:30 AM / 48 Comments
2009 has seen a lot of Semantic Web and structured data activity. Much of it has been driven by Linked Data, a W3C project which gained momentum this year. According to Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the Web, Linked Data is a sea change akin to the invention of the WWW itself. We've gone from a Web of documents to a Web of data.
The 10 products we've picked out for this end-of-year review are ones that have done interesting things with data. Connecting to other data, building new applications with data, sharing data, and more. These 10 products may not be the type of Semantic Web apps that the W3C envisaged in the 90s, but that no longer seems to matter. What's important is that the Web is becoming more meaningful - more semantic.See also our 2008 list.

Google Search Options and Rich Snippets

In May, Google announced two significant additions to its search product: Search Options and Rich Snippets. The two features notably extended Google's core search product and the 'rich snippets' part in particular was based around structured content.
Rich snippets extract and show useful information from web pages. Google is using structured data open standards such as microformats and RDFa to power the rich snippets feature. It is inviting publishers to mark up their HTML (webmasters can find more details here).

Feedly

Feedly describes itself as "magazine-like startpage." When it launched in August 2008, we labeled it just "an alternative interface for Google Reader." However with the launch of Feedly Mini, a mini bar that hovers at the bottom of the screen as you surf through blogs on the web, the service has become a much more inclusive blog reading companion.

Punk Rock Videos | Punk Bands TV

Punk Band Videos

MUZU TV - The Free Music Video Site (United States)

MUZU TV - The Free Music Video Site (United States)

FreeWheel

FreeWheel

AlwaysOn Picks Three .tv Businesses for AO250 � Watch.tv Blog

AlwaysOn Picks Three .tv Businesses for AO250 � Watch.tv Blog

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Need a job ?

Learn Spanish

http://firefoxaddons.elertgadget.com/post/Learn_Spanish_601136.htm



Blogger › Help articles › Getting started › Creating your blog › What does the Link field do?



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The Quick Answer

* The Link field associates a post with another webpage for reference.
* It's handy for link blogs or blogs that frequently provide critiques or commentary on other sites.

Note: This article assumes you're using a customized classic template. If you're using Layouts or a default classic template, set the Show Link Field option to Yes to enable the link field.

The Link field can be very useful if your blog posts are frequently about other articles, and you want the links to these articles visible on your public blog.

To enable the Link field:

1. Go to Settings | Formatting and scroll to the bottom.
2. Set Show Link Field to Yes.
3. Screenshot: Settings | Formatting | Show Link Field Paste this code into the appropriate place in your template:


Link


The "posted by" line is usually a good spot for it, but be creative:
Screenshot: URL code in a template

Here's what this looks like on the BoingBoing weblog:
BoingBoing Link tag example

Another method is to make your Post Titles links, like on Ev's blog:
EvHead Link tag example

Here's the code for doing it this way:



<$BlogItemTitle$>


Notes:

* You must specify a protocol when using the Link field, i.e. http://www.blogger.com — www.blogger.com isn't sufficient






Joker

tu.tv - Sites Linking in - from Alexa

tu.tv - Sites Linking in - from Alexa