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Zoomf does microformats

May 6th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in General, Zoomf

Last week we released a slightly updated Zoomf.  One of the less visible updates was the support of the hListing microformat.  We also GeoTagged all of the search results and property details pages with both GeoURL and Geo Tag formats.

hListing is a relatively new microformat, but has recently been thrust into the limelight by its adoption on the price comparison site Kelkoo, which is owned by Yahoo.  You can read the original blog post announcing this here.  Fellow property site Nestoria quickly followed suit with hListing support on their results pages.  I should add that I didn’t copy Nestoria in adding hListing support, its just that we were working on other important updates to Zoomf and didn’t have time to do an update of the main website straight away :).

GeoTagging is also quite new and basically consists of embedding geographic location meta data into your web page so that the content of a page can be linked to a geographic location.  For Zoomf this means that on any results page (eg for clowne) the page is geotagged to the search location, and for any property detail page the page is geotagged to the location of that particular property.

You may ask whats the point of all this meta data and embedded microformats, especially when afaik Google doesn’t take account of this stuff when they index web pages, and it is invisible to a user using their browser.  The answer is that someday the big search engines may take notice of this content and use it to enhance their search results, Yahoo recently announced that their search results will start to extract more semantic meaning from pages using microformats, so the so called semantic web, of which microformats are a key part may be closer than you would think.

Until then smaller more specialised applications will be able to use this extra meta data to do cool things with the content on your pages, one example is the Optimus microformat translator which can transform pages with microformat data to JSON, XML or RSS formats, try it on a Zoomf results page or a linkedin public profile to see what I mean.

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Fancy OpenGL transitions in OpenOffice for Ubuntu Hardy

May 5th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in General, Linux

While OpenOffice isnt really something to get excited about, I was looking forwards to the fancy OpenGL page transitions that I thought were due to be part of version 2.4 (shipped with the new version of ubuntu).

However when I decided to try them out it turns out they arent actually available.

Luckily there is an easy way to install them, simply do

sudo apt-get install openoffice.org-ogltrans

and restart open office and you will have some 3D goodness to smarten up your presentations.

Enjoy

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