Archive for the 'New Features' Category

Introducing High Definition Tasting Notes

Monday, November 13th, 2006

The tasting note is an elusive and sometimes controversial and intimidating part of the wine world. Anyone can create them but few of us do. Some people swear by them while others hate them. A few make a living off of them while others scribble them on napkins. Some live out their fantasies as poets in their tasting notes while others use cryptic shorthand that only they can understand. Tasting notes can make or break a winery or can end up crumpled in someone’s pocket destined for the spin cycle never to be seen again.

For those tasting notes that actually make it online, we want to help them live up to their full potential. That is, to offer a usable profile of not only the wine and producer but also of the reviewer. What do I mean by this? Well, imagine if you could take all tasting notes written in any language for a particular wine from several web sites, normalize their scores into a consistent scale, extract and summarize the tasting descriptors from all reviewers, apply an authority filter to add weight to tasting notes from recognized experts, and then provide a single global view of the wine from all of this information. This would give you a powerful tasting profile of a wine that is the true result of what people are actually experiencing. And this view can be expanded to provide tasting profiles at the vintage, producer, region, and varietal levels. Sound interesting? Scrugy is already doing this today!

Recently I wrote about Scrugy’s support for microformats. In this post I’d like to take it a step further and talk about what I like to call High Definition Tasting Notes, or HDTNs.

(more…)

Tasting Notes and Microformats

Thursday, November 2nd, 2006

Lots of us like to write tasting notes. In fact, there are millions of tasting notes out on the web. Many just have a score and maybe a few impressions of the wine. Others, though, include detailed information about the wine, background on the winery, and what food was paired with it. Some tasting notes are written by industry pundits who can make or break a winery with a score and review while others are written by wine novices trying to get their head around what they like and dislike in wine. Some tasting notes are added to blog posts, many to wine forums/bulletin boards, and still more to online wine communities.

At Scrugy, our challenge is to make sense of all these tasting notes. A daunting task indeed. So far we’ve done a pretty good job of letting you find tasting notes using Scrugy’s search engine. Also, some sites provide RSS feeds of their tasting notes that Scrugy can use to further narrow its focus. However, whether the tasting note is in the middle of a web page, buried in a bulletin board post, or part of a feed, isolating the vital and relevant parts of the tasting note among the surrounding content is nearly impossible. What we’re talking about here is basic information about the wine (vintage, producer, region), the score for the wine, information about the reviewer, and some impressions on the wine. Well, this effort just go a whole lot easier today with Scrugy’s support for the hReview microformat.

One of the more promising concepts in the Web 2.0 movement is the idea of a semantic web. That is, delivering content that is both meaningful to humans and computers. At the center of the semantic web are microformats. Put simply, microformats are lightweight and open data formats that build upon existing standards. There are microformats defined for representing people & organizations, events, social networks, tags, lists, reviews, and more. Microformats can be used anywhere well-formed (X)HTML is found, including web pages and RSS feeds.

So what does this have to do with tasting notes? By simply annotating a tasting note as an hReview on web pages, blog posts, forum posts, and feed items, Scrugy can pick up the detailed information it needs to properly index the tasting note. Let’s look at an example.

Here is the HTML for a simple tasting note as it may appear on a web page or in a blog post.

<div>
  <h1>2004 Navarro Pinot Noir Anderson Valley</h1>
  <p>Score: 5 out of 5</p>
  <blockquote>
    This vintage is intense: lots of berry, cherry flavors with
    a patina of toasty oak.
  </blockquote>
  <p>
    Reviewed by <a href="http://.../ted">Ted</a>
    on September 3, 2005
  </p>
</div>

Now the same tasting note annotated as an hReview would look something like this (additions in bold):

<div class="hreview“>
  <h1 class=”item“>2004 Navarro Pinot Noir Anderson Valley</h1>
  <p>Score: <abbr class=”rating” title=”5“>5 out of 5</abbr></p>
  <blockquote class=”description“>
    This vintage is intense: lots of berry, cherry flavors with
    a patina of toasty oak.
  </blockquote>
  <p class=”reviewer vcard“>
    Reviewed by <a class=”url fn” href=”http://…/ted”>Ted</a> on
    <abbr class=”dtreviewed” title=”20050903“>
      September 3, 2005
    </abbr>
  </p>
</div>

So with the addition of just a few class attributes and the <abbr> tag to the HTML, we now have a tasting note that is formatted just like the original but has the advantage of being computer readable. The “hreview” class name is what indicates that the nested content refers to a review (a review of a wine in our case). Nested within this element are elements with the pre-defined microformat classes ”item”, “rating”, “description”, “reviewer”, and “dtreviewed”. These classes tell us the name of the item being reviewed, the rating or score, a description of the review, who reviewed the item, and when it was reviewed. Instead of an opaque sequence of HTML tags, Scrugy can now interpret this markup as a tasting note and index it as such.

Although this example is simple, it does illustrate how seamlessly existing markup can be microformat-enabled without imposing restrictions on how it is displayed. And just as tools have evolved to make it easy for anyone to work with HTML to create blogs and web pages, new tools will emerge that make it easy for us to generate microformatted content as well. In fact, look for a new tools section on Scrugy that will, among other things, allow you to author a tasting note suitable for pasting into your favorite page editor or submission tool.

Stay tuned…

Aggregated Outbound Feeds

Thursday, October 26th, 2006

Screen shot of RSS iconScrugy now offers aggregated outbound feeds for each of the categories that it maintains as well as a “super” feed that covers all categories. Each feed includes the 20 most recent posts from all sites within the category.

So if you already use an aggregator such as My Yahoo, Google, BlogBridge, or Netvibes to monitor your feed subscriptions, add one or all of the Scrugy feeds to get your daily wine fix in one convenient dose. And if you join Scrugy and setup your My Scrugy page with your favorite wine feeds, Scrugy will give you a feed aggregating just those sites too.

Just look for the feed logo on the homepage next to each category name for the RSS subscription link. On your My Scrugy page, look for the “subscribe” link on your Subscriptions tab.

Connecting wineries to their blogs

Wednesday, October 25th, 2006

A quick announcement about a small, but very cool, feature that was released on Scrugy earlier today.

With the new aggregation services enhancements, Scrugy has been tracking several blogs authored by winery owners and winemakers in the Winery Blogs category. However, until today those blogs weren’t connected to the detail pages for the wineries they belonged to. Now there is a two-way link between the feed for the winery and the winery page. This means that on the “New Releases” page you will see a link to the winery detail page for the winery associated with a post and on the winery detail page you will see a new tab called “Blog” that lists the latest posts from the winery’s blog(s).

Check out the following winery detail pages for just a few examples.

So why do I think this is such a cool enhancement? Put simply, it allows winery bloggers to impact the content on the detail page for their winery on Scrugy without having to submit changes to or update Scrugy in any way. All they have to do is create a post on their blog and Scrugy will pick it up and integrate it on their detail page. Isn’t RSS a beautiful thing?

What do you think? Let me know.