News

First Public Working Draft: Web Payments Use Cases 1.0

16 April 2015 | Archive

Today the Web Payments Interest Group published a first draft of Web Payments Use Cases. The current payment landscape is changing rapidly, offering new opportunities for greater security, improved usability on mobile, and payment innovations in areas like digital wallets and cryptocurrencies. The lack of open standards for integrating the latest developments into the Web makes it more difficult for merchants, Web developers, and payment service providers to adapt to new payment solutions. Fragmented regulatory environments further complicate the payments landscape.

To achieve greater interoperability among merchants and their customers, payment providers, software vendors, mobile operators, and payment networks, the W3C Web Payments Interest Group, launched in October 2014, is developing a roadmap for standards to improve the interoperability of payments on the Web. Today’s use cases document establishes the group’s initial scope of work. Guided by these use cases, the W3C Web Payments Interest Group (see the current participants) plans to derive architecture and associated technology requirements. That work will form the basis of conversations with W3C groups and the broader payments industry about what standards (from W3C or other organizations) will be necessary to fulfill the use cases and achieve the full potential of Web payments.

Learn more about W3C’s work on Payments on the Web, supported in part by the European Union through the HTML5Apps project.

IndieUI: Events and IndieUI: User Context Updated Working Drafts Published

30 April 2015 | Archive

The IndieUI Working Group has published a Working Draft of IndieUI: Events 1.0 – Events for User Interface Independence and IndieUI: User Context 1.0 – Contextual Information for User Interface Independence. These drafts include a reduction in scope for the 1.0 version of Events, and minor property and interface changes in User Context. IndieUI: Events defines a way for different user interactions to be translated into simple events and communicated to Web applications. IndieUI: User Context defines a set of preferences that users can choose to expose to web applications, and an API for user agents to access the preferences and listen for changes. Both IndieUI specifications will make it easier for Web applications to work in a wide range of contexts — different devices (such as mobile phones and tablets), different assistive technologies (AT), different user needs. With these technologies, Web application developers will have a uniform way to design applications that work for multiple devices and contexts. The IndieUI Working Group is currently exploring moving this work to other Working Groups; however, comments on these drafts are still welcomed, preferably by 29 May 2015. Learn more from the IndieUI Overview; and read about the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI).

Call for Review: SCXML Proposed Recommendation Published

30 April 2015 | Archive

The Voice Browser Working Group has published a Proposed Recommendation of State Chart XML (SCXML): State Machine Notation for Control Abstraction. This document describes SCXML, or the “State Chart extensible Markup Language”. SCXML provides a generic state-machine based execution environment based on CCXML and Harel State Tables. Comments are welcome through 30 May. Learn more about the Voice Browser Activity.

Credential Management Level 1 Draft Published

30 April 2015 | Archive

The Web Application Security Working Group has published a Working Draft of Credential Management Level 1. This specification describes an imperative API enabling a website to request a user’s credentials from a user agent, and to help the user agent correctly store user credentials for future use. Learn more about the Security Activity.

UI Events (formerly DOM Level 3 Events) Draft Published

28 April 2015 | Archive

The Web Applications Working Group has published a Working Draft of UI Events (formerly DOM Level 3 Events). This specification defines UI Events which extend the DOM Event objects defined in DOM4. UI Events are those typically implemented by visual user agents for handling user interaction such as mouse and keyboard input. Learn more about the Rich Web Client Activity.

Last Call: W3C DOM4

28 April 2015 | Archive

The HTML Working Group has published a Last Call Working Draft of W3C DOM4. DOM defines a platform-neutral model for events and node trees. Comments are welcome through 19 May. Learn more about the HTML Activity.

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Talks and Appearances Header link

  • 2015-05-11 (11 MAY)

    Catching Up with Accessibility: Beginners' Basics

    by Shawn Henry

    AccessU

    Austin, TX, USA

  • 2015-05-11 (11 MAY)

    Easy Checks for Web Accessibility: Get the Gist (No Experience Necessary)

    by Shawn Henry

    AccessU

    Austin, TX, USA

  • 2015-05-11 (11 MAY)

    The WAI to Web Accessibility: An Interactive Tour through Resources from the W3C Web Accessibility

    by Kevin White

    AccessU

    Austin, TX, USA

  • 2015-05-11 (11 MAY)

    Web Accessibility Essentials using WAI-ARIA and HTML5

    by Eric Eggert

    AccessU

    Austin, TX, USA

  • 2015-05-12 (12 MAY)

    Web Accessibility Essentials Using WAI-ARIA and HTML5

    by Eric Eggert

    AccessU Summit

    Online, n/a

Events Header link