]> The LambCutlet Disorganisation » XFNification

The LambCutlet Disorganisation

XFNification

Posted by Jonathan at 15:33:00 UTC on the 13th of March, 2004

Bet you didn’t see this one coming… :P But in keeping of my penchant for TLAs, my whole site have been retro updated to support XFN.

What the heck is XFN? you ask… Well, their own page explains it best:

XFN puts a human face on linking. As more people have come online and begun to form social networks, services such as Technorati and Feedster have arisen in an attempt to show how the various nodes are connected. Such services are useful for discovering the mechanical connections between nodes, but they do not uncover the human relationships between the people responsible for the nodes.

XFN outlines the relationships between individuals by defining a small set of values that describe personal relationships. In HTML and XHTML documents, these are given as values for the rel attribute on a hyperlink. XFN allows authors to indicate which of the weblogs they read belong to friends, whom they’ve physically met, and other personal relationships. Using XFN values, which can be listed in any order, people can humanize their blogrolls and links pages, both of which have become a common feature of weblogs.

In sufficiently modern browsers, authors using XFN can easily style all links of a particular type; thus, friends could be boldfaced, co-workers italicized, and so on. It is also the hope of the authors that this practice becomes widespread enough to allow the creation of a service that charts personal (as opposed to purely mechanical) links between weblogs and the people responsible for them.

So another stride had been taken in Internet social networking, even if I’m a comparatively late adopter. One of the coolest tools which support XFN and shows it in action is RubHub which bills itself as an “XFN Relationship Lookup Engine”. Slick isn’t it? :D

Filed under: Meta, Internet, Technology, Personal

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