03 November 2006
SKOS - Wikipédia
SKOS ou Simple Knowledge Organisation System (système simple d'organisation des connaissances) est une famille de langages formels permettant une représentation standard des thésaurus, classifications ou tout autre type de vocabulaire contrôlé et structuré. SKOS est construit sur la base du langage RDF, et son principal objectif est de permettre la publication facile de vocabulaires structurés pour leur utilisation dans le cadre du Web sémantique. SKOS est actuellement développé dans le cadre du W3C.
30 October 2006
Actualité --- Silicon FR --- W3C met en place l'accès des sites Web aux handicapés
Le W3C publie une suite de documents pour permettre aux développeurs de créer du contenu Web enrichi et accessible aux personnes handicapées avec les technologies telles qu'AJAX ou DHTML
Roadmap for Accessible Rich Internet Applications (WAI-ARIA Roadmap)
The Roadmap for Accessible Rich Internet Applications (WAI-ARIA Roadmap) addresses the accessibility of dynamic Web content for people with disabilities. The roadmap outlines the technologies to map controls, AJAX live regions, and events to accessibility APIs, including custom controls used for Rich Internet Applications. The roadmap also outlines new navigation techniques to mark common Web structures as menus, primary content, secondary content, banner information and other types of Web structures. These new technologies can be used to improve the accessibility and usability of Web resources by people with disabilities, without extensive modification to existing libraries of Web resources.
25 October 2006
Gleaning Resource Descriptions from Dialects of Languages (GRDDL)
by 2 othersGRDDL is a mechanism for Gleaning Resource Descriptions from Dialects of Languages. This GRDDL specification introduces markup for declaring that an XML document includes gleanable data and for linking to an algorithm, typically represented in XSLT, for gleaning the resource descriptions from the document.
Le W3C publie la première version de la spécification GRDDL
Grâce au « Gleaning Resource Descriptions from Dialects of Languages » (littéralement « glanage des descriptions de ressources à partir des dialectes de langages ») ou GRDDL (à prononcer « griddeul »), les logiciels peuvent automatiquement extraire les informations des pages Web structurées pour les intégrer au Web sémantique.
20 October 2006
Vers une nouvelle guerre du web?
by 3 othersIntroduction aux 2 approches pour l'évolution d'HTML défendues par le W3C et le WHATWG
The future of HTML, Part 2: XHTML 2.0
by 1 otherIn this two-part series, Edd Dumbill examines the various ways forward for HTML that Web authors, browser developers, and standards bodies propose. This series covers the incremental approach embodied by the WHATWG specifications and the radical cleanup of XHTML proposed by the W3C. Additionally, the author gives an overview of the W3C's new Rich Client Activity. Here in Part 2, Edd focuses on the work in process at the W3C to specify the future of Web markup.
The future of HTML, Part 1: WHATWG
by 1 otherIn this two-part series, Edd Dumbill examines the various ways forward for HTML that Web authors, browser developers, and standards bodies propose. This series covers the incremental approach embodied by the WHATWG specifications and the radical cleanup of XHTML proposed by the W3C. Additionally, the author gives an overview of the W3C's new Rich Client Activity. Here in Part 1, Edd focuses primarily on two specifications being developed by WHATWG: Web Applications 1.0 (HTML5) and Web Forms 2.0.
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