hCalendar Plugin for TinyMCE Released.
At the Webvisions conference I attended a couple weeks ago, there was a lot of talk about microformats and open protocols that would enable the next generation of internet applications to not only share data, but to understand more and more data that resides on ordinary webpages.
Indeed, standards such as microformats are not new, they just haven’t been used too much. Now is, I believe, the time to start changing that. Instead of re-inventing the wheel, I’ve been working on creating some plugins for systems already in use so that they can benefit from the use of microformats. Today the first of these plugins was finished, and has been released.
The plugin is an hCalendar plugin for TinyMCE. TinyMCE is the WYSIWYG editor used in many popular content management systems and blogging softwares, including MODx, my CMS of choice, so I hope that by making this plugin available to such a wide audiance, many more people will be able to use microformats on their webpages and in their blogs… even if they don’t fully understand how they work.
The plugin works by opening a dialog box where a user can input event details including the event title, location, url, dates and times, a description, and some tags, and then encoding that data into an hCalendar event on the page. Once the data has been encoded into the hCalendar microformat, any software that supports hCalendar can extract the event details and add it to a calendar, run a search for similar events, or anything else.
To download the plugin for your own website or blog, please visit the hCalendar plugin page on my main site.
I would love to hear your feedback about this plugin in the comments. I hope to create some more plugins, including plugins to handle hCard data and Geo data once I have some more time.






