w3.org

SMIL 3.0 Advances Standard for Synchronized Multimedia

SMIL 3.0 Advances Standard for Synchronized Multimedia

Time 01.12.2008 10:15 Source  w3.org

2008-12-01: Today W3C announced a new standard to make it easier to author interactive multimedia presentations. Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL 3.0) allows video, audio, images, text, and hypertext links to be combined into interactive presentations, with fine-grain control of layout and timing. "The importance of SMIL 3.0 is that it contains a set of user-requested features that provide exciting new functionality, while retaining all the advantages of a declarative (that is, without scripting) approach to building a multimedia presentation," said Dick Bulterman, chair of the Synchronized Multimedia Working Group, which published the specification. Read the full press release, testimonials, and learn more about the Synchronized Multimedia Activity. (Permalink)

Region World Category Internet
W3C Talks in December

W3C Talks in December

Time 01.12.2008 10:15 Source  w3.org

2008-12-01: Browse W3C presentations and events also available as an RSS channel. (Permalink)

Region World Category Internet
Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Fifth Edition Is a W3C Recommendation

Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 Fifth Edition Is a W3C Recommendation

Time 01.12.2008 10:15 Source  w3.org

2008-11-26: The XML Core Working Group has published the W3C Recommendation of Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fifth Edition). This fifth edition of the widely deployed standard XML incorporates corrections to errata found in previous versions. In particular, one correction relaxes the restrictions on element and attribute names, thereby providing in XML 1.0 the major end user benefit currently achievable only by using XML 1.1. As a consequence, many possible documents that were not well-formed according to previous editions of this specification are now well-formed, and previously invalid documents using the newly-allowed name characters in, for example, ID attributes, are now valid. XML has been designed for ease of implementation and for interoperability with both SGML and HTML. Learn more about the Extensible Markup Language (XML) Activity. (Permalink)

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W3C Invites Implementations of XProc: An XML Pipeline Language

W3C Invites Implementations of XProc: An XML Pipeline Language

Time 01.12.2008 10:15 Source  w3.org

2008-11-26: The XML Processing Model Working Group invites implementation of the Candidate Recommendation of XProc: An XML Pipeline Language. This specification describes the syntax and semantics of XProc, a language for describing operations to be performed on XML documents. A pipeline consists of steps. Like pipelines, steps take zero or more XML documents as their inputs and produce zero or more XML documents as their outputs. The inputs of a step come from the web, from the pipeline document, from the inputs to the pipeline itself, or from the outputs of other steps in the pipeline. Learn more about the Extensible Markup Language (XML) Activity. (Permalink)

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Date: 01 December 2008 - 17:19

Number of sources in English: 130