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Latest W3C News
This chapter summarizes the latest and most important news from
W3C.
May 02, 2001
XML Schema is now a W3C Recommendation
XML 1.0 supports DTD for defining the structure of documents. Future versions
of XML will rely on XML Schemas for defining XML document types.
The XML Schema specification is now stable and has been reviewed by the W3C Membership,
who favors its adoption by academic, industry, and research communities.
For a summary of XML activities go to the W3C XML Page
April 10, 2001
Modularization of XHTML is now a W3C Recommendation
The Recommendation extends XHTML's reach onto emerging Web platforms like
mobile devices, television, and appliances.
The specification is now stable and has been reviewed by the W3C Membership,
who favors its adoption by academic, industry, and research communities.
For a summary of XHTML activities go to the W3C XHTML Page
December 20, 2000
XLink and XML Base Proposed Recommendations
W3C today announced the advancement of the XML Linking Language (XLink)
Version 1.0 and XML Base to Proposed Recommendation.
XLink is a vocabulary that allows hyperlinks to be added to XML documents.
XML Base provides a facility similar to the HTML base element for defining base
URLs.
For a summary of XML activities go to the W3C XML Page
December 19, 2000
XForms Working Draft Published
The W3C XForms Working Group today published a Working Draft of XForms 1.0.
The Working Draft describes the architecture, concepts, processing model, and
terminology underlying XForms, the next generation Web forms.
To learn more about XForms, study our XForms tutorial.
W3C Articles:
XForms 1.0 Working
Draft
W3C XForms home
page.
November 21, 2000
XSL 1.0 now a W3C Candidate Recommendation
W3C today announced the advancement of Extensible Stylesheet Language (XSL)
1.0 to Candidate Recommendation status.
The XSL Work Group considers this specification to be stable and encourages
implementation and during the review period. The Candidate Recommendation review
period ends on February 28, 2001.
To learn more about the XSL, go to our XSL tutorial.
Stay updated about XSL at W3C XSL.
November 16, 1999
XSLT 1.0 and XPath are Official !
World Wide Web Consortium has finally issued two parts of XSL - XSL
Transformations (XSLT) and XML Path Language (XPath) - as official W3C
Recommendations.
From the press release:
"These new specifications represent cross-industry and expert community
agreement on technologies that will enable the transformation and styled
presentation of XML documents. A W3C Recommendation indicates that a
specification is stable, contributes to Web interoperability, and has been
reviewed by the W3C membership"
To learn more about XSL, go to our XSL tutorial.
Stay updated about XSL at W3C XSL.
November 13, 2000
DOM Level 2 is now a W3C Recommendation
W3C today released the Document Object Model (DOM) Level 2 as a W3C
Recommendation.
The specification is stable, contributes to Web interoperability, and has
been reviewed by the W3C membership, who favor its adoption by the industry.
"The DOM Level 2 Recommendation builds on the solid work done in DOM
Level 1, and gives Web authors the power to move to XML for dynamic
content," says Lauren Wood, Chair of the W3C DOM Working Group.
To learn more about the DOM, go to our DOM tutorial.
Stay updated about the DOM at W3C DOM.
October 6, 2000
XML 1.0 Second Edition Published
W3C has published XML 1.0 SE as a W3C Recommendation. SE is an update of XML
1.0 with the first edition errata (bug fixes), and not a new version of XML.
Stay updated about XML at W3C XML.
September 29, 2000
Latest MSXML with full support for XSLT
Today Microsoft released a new beta of MSXML complete implementation of XSLT/Xpath
and new server-safe HTTP access.
The September 2000 XML Parser beta updates the July 2000 beta. This latest
release provides server-safe HTTP access, complete implementation of XSLT/XPath,
changes to the SAX2 implementation, and higher conformance with W3C standards.
Link : http://msdn.microsoft.com/xml/general/msxmlprev.asp
September 27, 2000
DOM Level 2 is a W3C Proposed Recommendation
DOM Level 2 has become a W3C Proposed Recommendation, and is now being
reviewed by the W3C membership for consideration as a W3C Recommendation. The
review period ends 25 October 2000.
To learn more about the DOM, go to our DOM tutorial.
Stay updated about the DOM at W3C DOM.
September 22, 2000
W3C Schema Working Drafts Released
The World Wide Web Consortium today released three XML schema Working Drafts.
XML Schema offers facilities for describing the structure and content of XML
documents. XML Schema provides a huge improvement over the capabilities found in
Document Type Definitions (DTD).
To learn more about DTD, go to our DTD tutorial.
To learn more about XML Schema, go to our Schema tutorial.
Stay updated about XML Schema at W3C XML.
September 14, 2000
W3C Launches XML Protocol Activity
Today, the WWW is used for access to documents and applications by human
users, working with Web browsers.
But the Web can grow significantly in power and scope if it is extended to
support communication between applications, from one program to another.
New technologies like SOAP and XML-RPC, have proven that simple XML-based
messages and remote procedure calls, layered on standard Web transports such as
HTTP, can effectively meet these requirements.
The purpose of the XML Protocol Working Group is to create a simple
foundation to support the needs of such communicating applications.
To learn more about SOAP, go to our SOAP tutorial.
W3C Articles:
XML Protocol Activity.
May 9, 2000 - SOAP 1.1 proposed to W3C
UserLand, Ariba, Commerce One, Compaq, Developmentor, HP, IBM, IONA, Lotus,
Microsoft, and SAP today proposed
to W3C the SOAP Internet protocol that they hope will revolutionize application
development by connecting
graphic user interface desktop applications to powerful Internet servers using
the standards of the Internet, HTTP and XML.
Read
the Press Release from UserLand Software. Read
the Full Quotes from Tim Bray, Paul Everitt, Fredrik Lundh, Jakob Nielsen,
Tod Nielsen, Tim O'Reilly, Doc Searls, Kevin Werbach and Dave Winer.
Study the Specification
at W3C. Read our article about SOAP.
April 18, 2000
XForms the next generation Web Forms
The World Wide Web Consortium has announced the release of the first Public
Working Draft of the XForms Data Model.
The XForms Data Model Working Draft, along with the XForms Requirements
document, provide the first cross-industry efforts in seven years to produce the
next generation of Web-based forms.
To learn more about XForms, go to our XForms tutorial.
W3C Articles:
W3C
Press Release.
W3C
Testimonials.
January 26, 2000
XHTML is now official
XHTML 1.0 became an official W3C Recommendation on 26 January 2000. A W3C
Recommendation means that the specification is stable, that it has been reviewed
by the W3C membership, and that the specification is now a Web standard..
XHTML is a reformulation of HTML 4.01 in XML, and can be put to immediate use
with existing browsers by following a few simple guidelines.
Check out our XHTML tutorial to find out
how to convert to XHTML.
W3C Articles:
W3C
Press Release
W3C
Testimonials.
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