Reminder: Position Papers for W3C Workshop on Web Payments due 8 February
28 January 2014 | Archive
W3C invites the financial technology community to attend its Workshop Web Payments: How do you want to pay?, on March 24-25 in Paris, France. W3C Member and non-Member participants will include banks, credit card companies, governments, mobile network operators, payment solution providers, technology companies, retailers, and content creators. W3C’s Workshop goal is to leverage the power of the Web to improve consumer payment choice and satisfaction, while easing the work of web developers to support all current and future payment solutions and empowering payment providers to easily reach across different solutions, devices and platforms. There is no Workshop fee, but interested parties should submit a presentation proposal or statement of interest to the Workshop Program Committee by 8 February. Read the media advisory and more information on participation.
Last Call: CSS Backgrounds and Borders Module Level 3
4 February 2014 | Archive
The Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) Working Group has published a Last Call Working Draft of CSS Backgrounds and Borders Module Level 3 for the purpose of updating the previous Candidate Recommendation. This module replaces two earlier drafts: CSS3 Backgrounds and CSS3 Border. CSS is a language for describing the rendering of structured documents (such as HTML and XML) on screen, on paper, in speech, etc. This draft contains the features of CSS level 3 relating to borders and backgrounds. It includes and extends the functionality of CSS level 2, which builds on CSS level 1. The main extensions compared to level 2 are borders consisting of images, boxes with multiple backgrounds, boxes with rounded corners and boxes with shadows. Comments are welcome through 3 March 2014. Learn more about the Style Activity.
Standards for Web Applications on Mobile: current state and roadmap
3 February 2014 | Archive
W3C has published the January 2014 edition of Standards for Web Applications on Mobile, an overview of the various technologies developed in W3C that increase the capabilities of Web applications, and how they apply more specifically to the mobile context.
A deliverable of the HTML5Apps project, this edition of the document includes changes and additions since September 2013, including 6 documents reaching Recommendation status (a record), which shows increased maturity of the platform; 4 FPWD and 4 new editors drafts illustrate it is still growing up nicely; and a lot of the changes are linked to performance, off-line support and packaging.
Learn more about the Web and Mobile Interest Group.