WWW2004's W3C track (original) (raw)
W3C Track @ WWW2004, New York City, NY
Introduction - Agenda - W3C Booth
Useful links: WWW2004 Program - Previous W3C Track'03 in Budapest
Introduction
W3C is providing content for the 13th International World Wide Web Conference - WWW2004 -, to be held at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers, on 17- 22 May 2004, New York City, NY, USA. The W3C Track conference room is New York Ballroom B, on the third floor (see floorplan).
The World Wide Web Consortium reports on the range of their achievements since last year's conference WWW2003. With fifty-one W3C Working Groups for twenty-one W3C Activities and about 370 Working Group members, attendees can expect substantive reports on the variety of technologies that bring the Web to its full potential, as well as insights on future work developments. In addition, attendees will have an opportunity to ask questions to the W3C staff. Tim Berners-Lee is giving the opening keynote.
The W3C Track runs from 19 to 21 May.
Agenda
time slots | Wednesday, May 19 - 2004 | Thursday, May 20 - 2004 | Friday, May 21 - 2004 |
---|---|---|---|
D1 | D2 | D3 | |
9:00 - 10:30 | WWW2004 Opening and Plenary Presentations | WWW2004 Plenary Presentations | WWW2004 Plenary Presentations |
11:00 - 12:30 S1 | [D1-S1] W3C and Web Standards - An Overview (Chair: Steve Bratt) Overview of the World Wide Web Consortium (Steve Bratt) W3C TAG and the Architecture of the Web (Dan Conolly) http://www.w3.org/: W3C Web standards into action (Karl Dubost) | [D2-S1] Semantic Web, Phase 2: Developments and Deployment (Chair: Eric Miller) Semantic Web Activity update (Eric Miller) Semantic Web Applications (Charles Myers - Adobe, Frank Careccia - Brandsoft, Dennis Quan - IBM, Jeff Pollock - Network Inference, Dave Reynolds -HP) | [D3-S1] W3C and the Mobile Web (Chair: Dave Raggett) Overview of Web Mobile Standards (Dave Raggett) Device Independent Web (Stéphane Boyera) SVG 1.2 and Mobile (Dean Jackson) |
14:00 - 15:30 S2 | [D1-S2] Web Access, Worldwide (Chair: Ivan Herman) Internationalization Update (Richard Ishida) WAI: Why Standards Harmonization is Essential to Web Accessibility (Judy Brewer) Update of WCAG 2.0 (Wendy Chisholm) | [D2-S2] Web Services Foundations and Innovations (Chair: Philippe Le Hégaret) Architecture and Future of Web Services: from SOAP to Semantic Web Services (Hugo Haas) Update on Web Services Description Language 2.0 - WSDL 2.0 (David Booth) Web Services Choreography (Yves Lafon) | 13:30 - 15:00 [D3-S2] Giving Voice to the Web (Chair: Bert Bos) W3C's Speech Interface Framework and Voice XML 2.0 (Max Froumentin) Multimodal Interaction (Dave Raggett) |
16:00 - 17:30 S3 | [D1-S3] Mixing Markup and Style for Interactive Content (Chair: Dean Jackson) Web Forms - XForms 1.0 (Steven Pemberton) CSS3 for Behaviors and Hypertext (Bert Bos) Mixed markup (Dean Jackson) | [D2-S3] XML: Progress Report and New Initiatives (Chair: David Booth) XSLT 2.0 (Lionel Villard - IBM) XML Query - XPath 2.0 (Michael Rys - Microsoft) XML Security (Hugo Haas) Binary Interchange of XML (Liam Quin) | 15:30 - 17:00 [D3-S3] Future Work in W3C - Public Q&A (Chair: Steve Bratt) What is coming up in W3C? (Tim Berners-Lee) Public Questions and Answers |
W3C Booth
W3C Communications will provide communication material, available in English.
W3C Recommendations
Each Recommendation not only builds on the previous, but is designed so that it may be integrated with future specifications as well. W3C is transforming the architecture of the initial Web (essentially HTML, URIs, and HTTP) into the architecture of tomorrow's Web, built atop the solid foundation provided by XML.
- Web Architecture
- W3C Recommendations Timeline (SVG file) - nearly 75 Web standards produced in over 9 years -
- Navigate through W3C Documents (SVG file)
- W3C's Organizational Diagram, with Working Group Dependencies (SVG file)
About the World Wide Web Consortium [W3C]
The W3C was created to lead the Web to its full potential by developing common protocols that promote its evolution and ensure its interoperability. It is an international industry consortium jointly run by the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MIT CSAIL) in the USA, the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics (ERCIM) headquartered in France and Keio University in Japan. Services provided by the Consortium include: a repository of information about the World Wide Web for developers and users, and various prototype and sample applications to demonstrate use of new technology. To date, nearly 400 organizations areMembers of the Consortium. For more information see http://www.w3.org/
Marie-Claire Forgue - W3C Track Chair
- last updated on Date:2004/06/2114:45:01Date: 2004/06/21 14:45:01 Date:2004/06/2114:45:01