It’s about 1½ year since BlogEngine.NET saw the light of day, and one person has been on the team almost from the very beginning. Of course, I’m talking about Al Nyveldt. We’ve been planning, designing and developing BlogEngine.NET all this time, but never actually met since I live in Denmark in him in Pennsylvania.

Well, now it’s about to change because I leave for New York City in a few hours and Al has agreed to meet up with me there. If you want to have a talk about the past, present and future of BlogEngine.NET, then meet us at noon in the Hilton hotel near Central Park – it’s this Friday, October 3rd.

For a long time I wanted to find a way to make it easy for .NET developers to start using the semantic web or Web 3.0. The semantic web is relatively unknown to most people and some of the technologies are very complex to understand.

Technologies or formats such as FOAF, APML, SIOC, XFN tags and microformats are some of the building blocks of the social aspects of the semantic web. They are used to create cross-site profiles of people and also represent relationships between them. XFN and microformats are somewhat easy to start using, but FOAF, APML and SIOC are a different story.

SemanticEngine.NET

That’s why I’ve just released the first initial code for a class library called SemanticEngine.NET on CodePlex. There is still a lot of code to be written, but right now it supports various different formats ready to use.

The idea is that you build the various formats using an easy-to-understand object model and then call a method that writes the documents to the response stream or to disk in XML. The idea is also that you can consume all these formats by pointing to a document somewhere on the web, and then the library will parse it and return an object graph.

APML

APML describes interests and is used to customize experiences online. This blog supports it natively, which makes it possible to filter all my blog posts based on the interests specified in your APML document. Check it out in the top right corner of this page.

The APML support in SemanticEngine.NET is done. You can easily generate your own documents or you can parse APML documents found on the web.

FOAF

Right now you can only generate FOAF documents, but very soon I’ll add a FOAF parser as well. This is more difficult because in order to do that, I actually have to use or write a full fledged RDF parser first.

SIOC

Coming soon

XFN

The XFN support in SemanticEngine.NET is almost done. At the moment you can give the XFN parser a website URL and it will then return a list of links that has the rel="me" attribute. The next version will return all the XFN attribute values such as friend, met, co-worker etc. That way you can scan a person’s social graph.

Microformats

The support for microformats is yet to come and it will be in the form of a parser. My idea is to let the parser take a website URL and then parse the HTML document for all the popular microformats such as hCard, hCalendar, hReview etc.

License

The library is free to use and free to modify in any given way. No crediting is needed. This is because my goal is to get people to use this everywhere. The more people that use semantic formats, the more useful it becomes and the more cool experiences will be possible to create online.

If you are interested in joining the development of SemanticEngine.NET, then please let me know. I sure could use some help, since my time is a bit limited. If you want to know more about the semantic web, then you can read my Guide to the semantic web post. Did I mention that all BlogEngine.NET 1.4+ users already have APML, FOAF, SIOC, XFN and microformats supported out-of-the-box?