W3C

Category Archives: HTML

This week at W3C: misconceptions on DRM into HTML5, JSON-LD, Net Neutrality, etc.

This is the 10-17 January 2014 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media. You […]
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This week at W3C: MPAA joined W3C, Vimeo rebuilds HTML5-Based Video Player, Vocabularies at W3C, TAG election, etc.

This is the 3-10 January 2014 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” –the first of the year, happy new year!– that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and […]
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This week at W3C: CSS is 17, W3C Spain office 10-year anniversary, TimBL on mass surveillance, etc.

This is the 13-20 December 2013 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” –the last of the year, that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is […]
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This week at W3C: Data Activity launched, HTML 5.1 Nightly’s Crocoduck, MDN redesigned, etc.

This is the 6-13 December 2013 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media. You […]
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This week at W3C: W3C TAG Nominations, successful 2013 #html5j conference, TimBL at #UNRightsAt20, etc.

This is the 29 November – 6 December 2013 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in […]
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This week at W3C: Faces of our Team, Tomorrow is #bbd13, HTML5 Games to Nickelodeon Android App, etc.

This is the 22-29 November 2013 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media. You […]
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This week at W3C: TimBL on pervasive surveillance, #TPAC2013, Spec: CSS Transitions Draft, etc.

This is the 15-22 November 2013 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media. You […]
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This week at W3C: TimBL on encryption cracking, Test the Web Forward now part of W3C, OpenH.264, etc.

This is the 1-8 November 2013 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends” that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media. You […]
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Dive into the Tunnels and make the Multilingual Web work: Internationalization Tag Set (ITS) 2.0

Last week the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) published “Internationalization Tag Set (ITS) 2.0” as a W3C Recommendation. So, what is ITS 2.0, who is behind it, and why should you care? Like the Tunnels of Disneyland Let’s compare this with Disneyland: you may not care about how the magic comes to life, as long […]
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Training Courses in Spanish. Now HTML5!

Web developers are key in the evolution of the Web, shaping its future. Their works impact on the quality of the Web –its contents, user experience and accessibility. Having this in mind, in the process of leading the Web to its full potential, W3C offers professional training activities with the main objective of “educating” developers […]
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