HTML Working Group, Drupal Developer Team, WordPress Developer Team, Greetings. I have a new feature idea for blogging platforms. The idea is for bloggers to be able to indicate, per article, organizations' websites and web services to ping with article events, in addition to pinging blog search engines with each articles' events. As envisioned, the feature would be configurable on blogging platforms and then for each blog article. Bloggers could indicate organizations, on a configuration page, by means of web service URL's. A web service function response could include organizational metadata for blogging platforms' user interfaces. Then, per article, bloggers could indicate which organizations that each blog article is pertinent to. Organizations could then receive pings for article events, from numerous bloggers, and link to or present the blog articles from numerous bloggers on their websites. A use case is consumer advocacy. Consumer advocacy groups, e.g. the Better Business Bureau, can each independently spider and index blog articles and tweets, where blog articles and tweets can have keywords or folksonomic tags, e.g. "bbb" or "#bbb", and can each utilize that data and make that data available on their websites. With the described feature of indicating organizations to ping, per article, consumers', parents', teachers', and scholars' commentary, feedback, and opinion, about digital textbooks and curriculum, for example, could be specifically routed, as indicated by each blogger, empowering bloggers and adding value to numerous organizations' websites including those of consumer advocacy groups, teachers' and education-related organizations. In addition to the use of hyperlinks for indicating discussed items, for example opening digital textbooks to specific pages and object configurations (http://idpf.org/epub/linking/cfi/epub-cfi.html, http://www.w3.org/TR/media-frags/), some bloggers might want to also utilize hypertext quotes or multimedia clips in their blog articles during fair use scenarios. The new blogging platform feature of pinging one or more organizations as indicated per article could additionally benefit scholarly and scientific communication. Scholars and scientists with blogs could utilize the new feature to indicate which scholarly and scientific organizations to ping for specific blog articles. The blog articles of many scholars and scientists could then be linked to or appear on a number of scholarly and scientific organizations' websites for Web users to discover, read, and interact with. Kind regards, Adam Sobieski
Hello Adam, let me know if I can contribute with any expert programming services if needed. Harshad 914 239 3006 Skype : harshad_clarion From: development-bounces@drupal.org [mailto:development-bounces@drupal.org] On Behalf Of Adam Sobieski Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2012 3:58 AM To: public-html@w3.org Cc: development@drupal.org; wp-forums@lists.automattic.com Subject: [development] A New Feature for Blogging Platforms HTML Working Group, Drupal Developer Team, WordPress Developer Team, Greetings. I have a new feature idea for blogging platforms. The idea is for bloggers to be able to indicate, per article, organizations' websites and web services to ping with article events, in addition to pinging blog search engines with each articles' events. As envisioned, the feature would be configurable on blogging platforms and then for each blog article. Bloggers could indicate organizations, on a configuration page, by means of web service URL's. A web service function response could include organizational metadata for blogging platforms' user interfaces. Then, per article, bloggers could indicate which organizations that each blog article is pertinent to. Organizations could then receive pings for article events, from numerous bloggers, and link to or present the blog articles from numerous bloggers on their websites. A use case is consumer advocacy. Consumer advocacy groups, e.g. the Better Business Bureau, can each independently spider and index blog articles and tweets, where blog articles and tweets can have keywords or folksonomic tags, e.g. "bbb" or "#bbb", and can each utilize that data and make that data available on their websites. With the described feature of indicating organizations to ping, per article, consumers', parents', teachers', and scholars' commentary, feedback, and opinion, about digital textbooks and curriculum, for example, could be specifically routed, as indicated by each blogger, empowering bloggers and adding value to numerous organizations' websites including those of consumer advocacy groups, teachers' and education-related organizations. In addition to the use of hyperlinks for indicating discussed items, for example opening digital textbooks to specific pages and object configurations (http://idpf.org/epub/linking/cfi/epub-cfi.html, http://www.w3.org/TR/media-frags/), some bloggers might want to also utilize hypertext quotes or multimedia clips in their blog articles during fair use scenarios. The new blogging platform feature of pinging one or more organizations as indicated per article could additionally benefit scholarly and scientific communication. Scholars and scientists with blogs could utilize the new feature to indicate which scholarly and scientific organizations to ping for specific blog articles. The blog articles of many scholars and scientists could then be linked to or appear on a number of scholarly and scientific organizations' websites for Web users to discover, read, and interact with. Kind regards, Adam Sobieski
This can already be done, at least most of it, with Drupal. You will need some of the contrib modules which you can find a list of at drupal.org/project/modules and drupalmodules.com. Earnie On Tue, Dec 4, 2012 at 5:28 PM, Adam Sobieski <adamsobieski@hotmail.com> wrote:
HTML Working Group, Drupal Developer Team, WordPress Developer Team,
Greetings. I have a new feature idea for blogging platforms. The idea is for bloggers to be able to indicate, per article, organizations' websites and web services to ping with article events, in addition to pinging blog search engines with each articles' events. As envisioned, the feature would be configurable on blogging platforms and then for each blog article.
Bloggers could indicate organizations, on a configuration page, by means of web service URL's. A web service function response could include organizational metadata for blogging platforms' user interfaces. Then, per article, bloggers could indicate which organizations that each blog article is pertinent to. Organizations could then receive pings for article events, from numerous bloggers, and link to or present the blog articles from numerous bloggers on their websites.
A use case is consumer advocacy. Consumer advocacy groups, e.g. the Better Business Bureau, can each independently spider and index blog articles and tweets, where blog articles and tweets can have keywords or folksonomic tags, e.g. "bbb" or "#bbb", and can each utilize that data and make that data available on their websites. With the described feature of indicating organizations to ping, per article, consumers', parents', teachers', and scholars' commentary, feedback, and opinion, about digital textbooks and curriculum, for example, could be specifically routed, as indicated by each blogger, empowering bloggers and adding value to numerous organizations' websites including those of consumer advocacy groups, teachers' and education-related organizations.
In addition to the use of hyperlinks for indicating discussed items, for example opening digital textbooks to specific pages and object configurations (http://idpf.org/epub/linking/cfi/epub-cfi.html, http://www.w3.org/TR/media-frags/), some bloggers might want to also utilize hypertext quotes or multimedia clips in their blog articles during fair use scenarios.
The new blogging platform feature of pinging one or more organizations as indicated per article could additionally benefit scholarly and scientific communication. Scholars and scientists with blogs could utilize the new feature to indicate which scholarly and scientific organizations to ping for specific blog articles. The blog articles of many scholars and scientists could then be linked to or appear on a number of scholarly and scientific organizations' websites for Web users to discover, read, and interact with.
Kind regards,
Adam Sobieski
-- Earnie -- https://sites.google.com/site/earnieboyd
HTML Working Group, Drupal Developer Team, WordPress Developer Team, Greetings. For those interested in blogging-related digital publishing topics, and enhancements applicable to consumer advocacy, scholarly and scientific communication, and for other uses of blogs, I would like to provide an update. The aforementioned new features, per-article pinging, have been posted to the WordPress website informationally and for discussion: http://en.forums.wordpress.com/topic/new-blog-platform-feature Also, if anybody knows of other developer teams to contact with regard to these new features, I would welcome others to spread the word about the new features for both bloggers and organizations. An example usage scenario is that of a computer scientist writing an article for their blog and, while they ping a number of search engines for each article, they want to ping the ACM and IEEE for the specific blog article, which have, in the usage scenario, dynamic website content for computer scientists', ACM and IEEE computer scientists' compositions, including content hosted online as blog articles, or as forum messages. Towards implementational topics, Web-related technologies, digital publishing technologies, the scientist blogger could have, in the example, logged on to their blogging platform and entered web services URL's for both the ACM and IEEE and, then, possibly via XML-RPC, the blog platform obtained metadata to display ACM and IEEE organizations in the various user interfaces of the blog platform for configurations per blog article, as well as other web services related data. The blogger may also have logged on to the ACM and IEEE websites, if those websites required any concurrent configuration. Thereafter, the scientist blogger could conveniently choose to, per blog article, ping either the ACM, the IEEE, or both, for specific blog articles to appear on webpages, along with their colleagues' content, adding value to the websites with fresh user-generated content, enhancing website-contextual interactions between users, enhancing online communities, and empowering bloggers. Kind regards, Adam Sobieski
participants (3)
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Adam Sobieski -
Earnie Boyd -
Harshad M - Clarion