OpenSocial Foundation Moving Standards Work to W3C
16 December 2014 | Archive
Building on the 31 July 2014 announcement of the W3C Social Web Working Group, the OpenSocial Foundation and W3C today announce the transfer of OpenSocial specifications and assets to the W3C. As of 1 January 2015, OpenSocial Foundation will close and future work will take place within the W3C Social Web Activity, chartered to make it easier to build and integrate social applications into the Open Web Platform.
“The consensus of the OpenSocial Board is that the next phase of Social Web Standards, built in large part on the success of OpenSocial standards and projects like Apache Shindig and Rave, should occur under the auspices of the W3C Social Web Working Group, of which OpenSocial is a founding member,” said John Mertic, OpenSocial Foundation President.”
Read more in the press release and blog post with details and FAQ, and learn more about W3C’s Social Web Activity.
First Public Working Drafts: XProc 2.0: An XML Pipeline Language; XProc 2.0: Standard Step Library
18 December 2014 | Archive
The XML Processing Working Group has published a First Public Working Draft of XProc 2.0: An XML Pipeline Language, together with a Standard Step Library. XProc is an XML pipeline language; that is, a declarative dataflow language used to express steps required to process XML documents, coordinating operations such as querying, validation, inclusion, transformation and sorting. The XProc step library defines names and characteristics for a set of pipeline steps that every XProc processor is expected to support, as well as additional optional steps. Lean more about the XML Activity.
Upcoming Workshop: Data, content and services for the Multilingual Web
18 December 2014 | Archive
W3C announced today the eighth MultilingualWeb workshop in a series of events exploring the mechanisms and processes needed to ensure that the World Wide Web lives up to its potential around the world and across barriers of language and culture. To be held 29 April 2015 in Riga, this workshop is made possible by the generous support of the LIDER project. The workshop is part of the Riga Summit 2015 on the Multilingual Digital Single Market (27-29 April). Anyone may attend the workshop and the summit at no charge and the W3C welcomes participation by both speakers and non-speaking attendees. Early registration is encouraged due to limited space.
Building on the success of seven highly regarded previous workshops, this workshop will emphasize new technology developments that may lead to new opportunities for the Multilingual Web. The workshop brings together participants interested in the best practices and standards needed to help content creators, localizers, language tools developers, and others meet the challenges of the multilingual Web. It provides further opportunities for networking across communities that span the various aspects involved. We are particularly interested in speakers who can demonstrate novel solutions for reaching out to a global, multilingual audience. Registration is available online.