This week: W3C Annotations Workshop, WebRTC Summit, Net Neutrality in Europe, etc.
Part of Accessibility
This is the 28 March - 4 April 2014 edition of a “weekly digest of W3C news and trends" that I prepare for the W3C Membership and public-w3c-digest mailing list (publicly archived). This digest aggregates information about W3C and W3C technology from online media —a snapshot of how W3C and its work is perceived in online media.
W3C and HTML5 related Twitter trends
Nothing stood out particularly this week; I noted a few mentions of:
- W3C Annotations Workshop
- JATS-Con (where Liam Quin presented “Publishing in Style with XML”)
- WebRTC Global Summit (where Dominique Hazaël-Massieux keynoted “WebRTC: Web, meet Communications”)
- W3C TAG face-to-face meeting and Extensible Web Summit (held today)
Net Neutrality & Open Web
- Forbes: The EU Outpaces The U.S. On Net Neutrality, 4 April 2014
- Gigaom: European Parliament passes strong net neutrality law, along with major roaming reforms, 3 April 2014
- Chris Marsden: Commissioner Kroes can Skype her grandchildren's mobiles in retirement?, 3 April 2014
W3C in the Press (or blogs)
6 articles this week. A selection follows. Read more and find keywords on our Press clippings.
- IT World (3 April), Web developers less concerned about browser-compatibility, more concerned with HTML5
- Computer World (2 April), Ad tracking: Is anything being done?
- IT World (31 March), Accessible technology professionals will soon be able to get certified
- Microfinance Monitor (29 March), How www (World Wide Web) was born at CERN 25 years ago?
Comments (0)
Comments for this post are closed.