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 may tweet your demos and cool dev/design stuff to @koalie, or write me e-mail. If you have suggestions for improvement, please leave a comment.
W3C and HTML5 buzz in Twitter
[What was tweeted frequently, what caught my attention.
Most recent first (popularity is flagged with a figure —number of times the same URIs or tweet was quoted/RTed.]
(809)
BBC: Berners-Lee: ‘surveillance threatens web’(112)
Opera: Opera 18 comes out today. Custom themes, support for HTML5/W3C media capture, and more.(40)
Digital Kosovo: World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) just added Kosovo in the countries list.(30)
W3C Spec: CSS Transitions Draft Published(76)
Trend: #TPAC2013
W3C in the Press (or blogs)
25 articles in the past few weeks. A selection follows. Highlights:
- TimBL on pervasive surveillance (6 articles)
- W3C annual conference in China (5 articles)
[Most recent first. Find keywords and more on our Press clippings]
- BBC News Technology (21 November), Tim Berners-Lee says ‘surveillance threatens web’
- VentureBeat (20 November), HTML5 vs. native vs. hybrid mobile apps: 3,500 developers say all three, please
- InfoWorld (19 November), NSA spying will ultimately benefit us all
- ReadWrite (18 November), How HTML5 Crashed, Burned, And Rose Again
- The Register (14 November), Mandatory HTTP 2.0 encryption proposal sparks hot debate
- 21CN.COM (12 November), W3C CEO:Patent-Free推动互联网开放与创新 (W3C CEO: Patent-Free powers the internet openness and innovation)
- InfoQ (9 November), What’s the Problem with Mobile HTML5?
- Wired (7 November), Responsive HTML5 Apps: Write Once, Run Anywhere? Where is Anywhere?
- The Guardian (1 November), NSA furore has roots in US internet imperialism
- Wired (28 October), The Next Battle Ground for the Titans of Tech
One thought on “This week at W3C: TimBL on pervasive surveillance, #TPAC2013, Spec: CSS Transitions Draft, etc.”