Home > Yahoo and Dapper Begin To 'Semantify' the Web

Article

Yahoo and Dapper Begin To 'Semantify' the Web

4/2/2008

Yahoo is beginning the process of indexing semantic elements on the Web, and Dapper announced the release of Semantify, a semantic mark-up tool for your own Web page. You "show" Semantify your page, point and click parts of your page you want to mark up, name them by using a naming protocol available to you at the site, get a chunk of PHP code that you paste into the header of your Web page, and voila! You've been Semantified. [For an interesting discussion of how to Semantify your Web pages quickly, see Marshall Kirkpatrick's ReadWriteWeb article, "Semantify -- Automate Your Semantic Web SEO in Five Minutes."]


Trent Batson, Ph.D. has served as an English professor, director of academic computing, and has been an IT leader since the mid-1980s. He is currently a Communication Strategist in the Office of Educational Innovation and Technology at MIT. batsontr@mit.edu

Cite this Site

Trent Batson, "Yahoo and Dapper Begin To 'Semantify' the Web," Campus Technology, 4/2/2008, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=60414

copy text (above) for proper citation



Recommended Reading
  • Fixed-Mobile Convergence: Dartmouth Beefs Up Cell Coverage, Cuts Costs

    Problems with cell phone coverage aren't uncommon on college campuses. There are two main reasons: The beefy structure of historic buildings can block cellular reception within walls, and, on more remote campuses outside cities, signal coverage can be light.

  • Thompson Rivers U Deploys Unified Digital Campus for ERP

    Thompson Rivers University (TRU) in British Columbia has selected SunGard Higher Education's Banner Unified Digital Campus (UDC) to integrate its ERP systems.

  • DV Kitchen Web Video Publishing System Released

    DVcreators.net has released DV Kitchen, a new video encoding and publishing application for Mac OS X designed specifically for creating materials to be posted on the Web.

  • NEC Debuts 4 Education Projectors

    NEC this week debuted four new projectors targeted toward education applications, along with a new MultiSync LCD display. The new NP-series projectors are entry-level models started at $899 but are designed to provide high light output, support for closed captioning, and built-in networking capabilities.

  • Security Researchers Uncover Spring Framework Vulnerability

    Software frameworks are enjoying enormous popularity these days among a range of developers. It's popularity well earned; frameworks provide powerful tools for building more flexible and less error-prone applications. They generally enhance developer productivity with out-of-the-box functionality. And they can free developers to focus on features instead of common coding tasks.

  • 3PAR Server Arrays Integrate Fat-to-Thin Processing

    Utility storage provider 3PAR has announced the release of the 3PAR InServ T400 and T800 Storage Servers. The new hardware is built on the company's third-generation InSpire architecture, featuring the 3PAR Gen3 ASIC with integrated fat-to-thin processing.