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<title>Jeni Tennison on O&apos;Reilly Broadcast</title>
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<id>tag:broadcast.oreilly.com,2008-08-07://53</id>
<updated>2008-09-07T21:30:16Z</updated>

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<title>XSpec</title>
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<published>2008-09-07T21:30:16Z</published>
<updated>2008-09-07T21:30:16Z</updated>

<summary>A while ago I put together a framework for unit testing XSLT. I&#8217;ve been using that for a couple of years and it&#8217;s been OK, but then I started playing with Ruby on Rails, and testing with RSpec: a framework...</summary>
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<name>Jeni Tennison</name>
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A while ago I put together a framework for unit testing XSLT. I&#8217;ve been using that for a couple of years and it&#8217;s been OK, but then I started playing with Ruby on Rails, and testing with RSpec: a framework...
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<entry>
<title>RDFa and HTML5: UK Government Experience</title>
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<id>tag:broadcast.oreilly.com,2008://53.33291</id>

<published>2008-09-04T08:22:13Z</published>
<updated>2008-09-04T08:22:13Z</updated>

<summary>There was a lot of discussion on the WHATWG mailing list last week about the role and utility of RDFa, whether it&#8217;s something that should be supported in HTML5, and what that support should look like. The objections to adding...</summary>
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<name>Jeni Tennison</name>
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There was a lot of discussion on the WHATWG mailing list last week about the role and utility of RDFa, whether it&#8217;s something that should be supported in HTML5, and what that support should look like. The objections to adding...
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